Start by making an official notification, in person, to child support enforcement. Take names of you you talk to. Get a printout to make sure you show as current on your payments.
How do I stop the payments now?
No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.
Child support payments usually stop at age 18, unless some payments have been missed along the way ... Providing ALL your payments for child support are fully up to date and paid in full, you can file in court to have these stopped.
Hands down California has some of the toughest child support laws in the United states. California just like most U.S. states also is guilty of having an outdated system for tracking child support payments. For more in depth information regarding child support laws check out the site listed in related links
Child support can be garnished from RSDI payments (but not SSI).
Catch up on your child support payments.
You must return to court to have the order modified as soon as possible. Until the child support order is modified you may be incurring arrearages.
In California, each county has a district attorney's office which collects child support payments (both current and arrears) from the non-custodial parent free of charge. These offices are funded through tax dollars, not incentive payments or grant monies.
Child support payments change or stop only by order of the venue that issued the order for support.
No, not unless they are specifically addressed in the child support order. The obligor does not have the right to designate where child support payments will go. They are to be paid to the custodial parent. Any other payments will be viewed as voluntary or gifts.No, not unless they are specifically addressed in the child support order. The obligor does not have the right to designate where child support payments will go. They are to be paid to the custodial parent. Any other payments will be viewed as voluntary or gifts.No, not unless they are specifically addressed in the child support order. The obligor does not have the right to designate where child support payments will go. They are to be paid to the custodial parent. Any other payments will be viewed as voluntary or gifts.No, not unless they are specifically addressed in the child support order. The obligor does not have the right to designate where child support payments will go. They are to be paid to the custodial parent. Any other payments will be viewed as voluntary or gifts.
Show the court that: the child is deceased; the child has been adopted; the child is emancipated; the child has attained majority; and/or you have no income other than public assistance; and, you do not owe any past-due support.
Request a printout from child support enforcement. see links