A parent is no longer responsible for a child in the US when a child turns 18. Of course, a parent can also have rights terminated or turn the child over to a guardian.
In New York, parents are legally responsible for their children until they reach the age of 21.
In New York, parents are legally responsible for their child until the child turns 21 years old.
In New York, a parent is typically responsible for a child until they turn 18 years old, which is the age of majority. This means that at 18, the child is legally considered an adult and the parent is no longer responsible for them.
In New York, a parent cannot unilaterally emancipate an 18-year-old child. Emancipation typically requires a legal process or agreement between the parent and child, or a court order. Once a child reaches the age of 18, they are considered a legal adult in New York.
In New York, a parent's legal responsibility for a child typically ends when the child turns 21 or when the child becomes legally emancipated before that age. It can also end if the child gets married, joins the military, or is declared legally emancipated by a court.
In New York, parents are generally not legally responsible for their 18-year-old child once the child is no longer living in their home. Once the child reaches the age of majority (18 in New York), they are considered adults and are responsible for themselves.
When they turn 18.
In New York, parents are legally responsible for their child until the child turns 21 years old.
In New York, a parent cannot unilaterally emancipate an 18-year-old child. Emancipation typically requires a legal process or agreement between the parent and child, or a court order. Once a child reaches the age of 18, they are considered a legal adult in New York.
At 18 years old, you are considered an adult and your parents are no longer responsible for your support unless there is a child support order saying otherwise.
They have the right to tell them to move out. They are no longer responsible for the adult and can have them forcibly removed by the police.
No, they are no longer responsible once they reach the age of majority. In New York that is age 18.
{| |- | That would be the age of majority. In New York that is 18 years of age. After they child reaches 18, the parents are no longer responsible for them. |}
No. When married he/she is emancipated.
{| |- | Certainly you can, unless you are in New York. Once the child reaches the age of majority, 18 in most places, but 21 in New York, the parent is no longer responsible for them. There is no requirement to provide them a home after that age. |}
In New York, a parent is typically responsible for a child until they turn 18 years old, which is the age of majority. This means that at 18, the child is legally considered an adult and the parent is no longer responsible for them.
Yes, they can tell them to get out of their home. Once the child is an adult, age 18, the parents are no longer legally responsible for them. They can even charge them with trespassing if they don't leave
The child is no longer a minor. As an adult, they are responsible for themselves.