As the judge has given you a fixed amount to pay as a child support, then the decree will tell , when it should be paid usually it is in the first ten days of the month.
Giving up rights does not alter the fact that the child is his. If he gives them up so the child can be adopted, then he may be relieved of the payments.
FUTURE CHILD SUPPORT PAYMENTSyes he has to pay child support payments as long as he is told todoso by the courts.now if the new husband gives your child his name and the biological father agrees tosign his rights over he will not have to payany child support payments ,but as long as he hasn't signed his rights away you can get married and still get your child child support payments.both parents has to agree to have one parent give up their partenal rights.
Sorry, but maybe you meant child support modification? A child support modification is a judicial order and can significantly reduce or increase the amount of support a parent gives or receives. also if you need to know more about child support, here is the following link that should be useful to you: lawrina.
Termination of parental rights does not, in itself, terminate child support.
He will still have to pay support until/unless the child is adopted.
DSS might have funds available for the child (but not child support, per se - that's the parents' responsibility).
Giving up your rights as a parent requires legal steps--it cannot be just a verbal notification. As far as child support, by rights you should be paying for the child until it reaches adulthood--it is just the right thing to do. If you need to adjust the payments due to your circumstances, you should do it officially through the courts.
yes he does
now that you are married to the father of your child he doesn't pay child support but pays no gives more money to support yours and his child and running the household. good luck
Yes, he can be. see links below
Yes, most of the time, but sometimes there isn't as much money in the child support to cover it Actually, the intent of the law is such: If both parents made the same amount of money neither would not pay child support. In that case each would be responsible for all support costs when they are with them: food, housing, medical, clothing, everything. There would be no sharing of any costs. Since there is a disparity in the incomes the child support gives the receiver, money to provide for the children to the same extent as the payer during their time of care. What this does is maintain the level of living for the children when with both parents. If child support was meant to pay for all of one parent's financial obligations for that child, then the person receiving the child support would have to pay all of the medical cost, all of the clothing, all of the food, all of the housing expenses for both homes for the child. The person paying would pay for nothing even when the child was with them. It is a means of evening out the disparity and maintaining an even level of care for the minor children. NOT to absolve either of paying for care during their time with the children.
Yes, unless/until the child is adopted.