Most child support orders are in effect until the child graduates from high school. This depends on child support provisions in your child support order or agreement. It can continue through an undergraduate degree in some cases.
No, unless there is a specific provision written into the child support orders addressing secondary schools.
If the child is still in high school, child support continues until the child graduates or turns 19, whichever occurs first.
It changes only if the order for support specifically provides for such change.
Regardless of whether or not your child graduates high school in PA, once he/she reaches the age of 18, child support is absolved.
Absolutely. In some states is until the child is 21, in others, until the child graduates.
Unless the order states otherwise, the amount of support does not change when one child attains majority/becomes emancipated.
No, child support ends in Pennsylvania when the child turns 18 and has graduated from high school.
Each state has different laws. Most states the non-custodial parent pays child support for each child until the child turns 18 or graduates high school. Some states require you to pay until the child graduates college. You should go on the website for your state for more information.
Generally, the support obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age or the child graduates from high school, whichever occurs last. A child will also automatically be ineligible for child support if that child marries, is removed from disability status by a court order, or if the child dies.
Yes. Child support in most states makes you obligated to pay until your child is 18, or graduates from high school. If your child is under 18 and in trade school, you still have to pay.
Child support does not automatically go to the person with whom the child is living, it goes to whomever the court order says it does. If the court order says you have to pay child support until the child graduates, then you must pay child support until the child graduates, even if the child is actually living with you. You could almost certainly petition the court to change this, but you'd have to take the trouble to actually do so.