In general, the amount of child support is based on net income; student status does not, in itself, exempt one from paying support. The court may require you to seek employment in order to meet your obligation to your child[ren].
Yes, by paying his child support arrears in full.Yes, by paying his child support arrears in full.Yes, by paying his child support arrears in full.Yes, by paying his child support arrears in full.
It means that you'll be paying your arrearage/back child support until paid in full, regardless the age of the child.
yes But, was the mother paying?
You can be ordered to get a full time job. see links
No. Once you owe back child support (arrearage), you' will be paying until paid in full. There is no statute of limitations when child support is at issue, regardless of the age (s) of the child (ren).
The father does, since the mother is paying her share towards the children in the form of child support.
You will no longer have to pay child support once your child reaches 18 years old and they choose not to attend college. If they attend college full-time, you will be ordered to continue paying until they either graduate or drop out.
Superficially yes. But if someone is still paying child support then they also have custody by rights. Though you would have full and the person paying it would have some time with the child typically
Yes. Answer If your child now works full time she is deemed to be self-sufficient so you should not be paying child support.
No, parents paying child support cannot deduct those payments from their income when determining eligibility for Section 8 housing. Child support payments are considered part of the recipient's income, and the paying parent's income is assessed in full. Therefore, both the payer and recipient must report child support payments when calculating income for housing assistance.
You don't. They must be paid in full. In some cases a judge may order jail time in place of re-paying child support.
There is no statute of limitation on back child support in any state. The other parent is paying until what's owed is paid in full, regardless of the age(s) of the child(ren).