Child support is based on a formula of income and percentage of time spent with each parent.
I'm not familiar with NC, but I doubt that the father would have to pay child support i such a case.
when a person has a child it is mandatory that they pay child support no matter where they live
Only if a NC court becomes the Court of Jurisdiction.
Yes, until/unless the child is adopted.
No. Once a child is legally emancipated, the parent is no longer obligated to pay child support.
Other than the mother, no one.
Yes, until/unless the child is adopted.
No not in the state of NC - only for child support and taxes. Wanda Improve Credit, LLC
Through a filing in SC.
Federal limits place it at 55% of gross income.
It goes to the state social services division. see links below
The answer depends on the formula used to calculate child support in your jurisdiction. Generally, most states rely on a formula that uses a percentage of the non-custodial parent's wages so if the custodial parent gets a raise in pay it may not offset the NC parent's obligation.You can perform an online search to find the guidelines in your jurisdiction using your state + child support guidelines.The answer depends on the formula used to calculate child support in your jurisdiction. Generally, most states rely on a formula that uses a percentage of the non-custodial parent's wages so if the custodial parent gets a raise in pay it may not offset the NC parent's obligation.You can perform an online search to find the guidelines in your jurisdiction using your state + child support guidelines.The answer depends on the formula used to calculate child support in your jurisdiction. Generally, most states rely on a formula that uses a percentage of the non-custodial parent's wages so if the custodial parent gets a raise in pay it may not offset the NC parent's obligation.You can perform an online search to find the guidelines in your jurisdiction using your state + child support guidelines.The answer depends on the formula used to calculate child support in your jurisdiction. Generally, most states rely on a formula that uses a percentage of the non-custodial parent's wages so if the custodial parent gets a raise in pay it may not offset the NC parent's obligation.You can perform an online search to find the guidelines in your jurisdiction using your state + child support guidelines.