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This assumes you mean, "How does a father put himself on child support?": 1) establish paternity; 2) get legal custody of child; 3) petition courts for child support (all of these steps will require notice to the mother of the child).
Because she has no child to pay for.
This is actually Jerry Reed, an old country artist. You also may remember Jerry from Smokey and the Bandit fame playing Burt Reynold's sidekick truckdriver, Snowman. The song title is "She Got The Goldmine, and I Got The Shaft".
She isn't...
$90, 00.00 to $100 thousand a month 1.2 million a year, that's when he's not taken to court for non-payment of child support, or he going to court for a child support reduction, if you really want to know how much someone is really worth, not the tabloids trash talk, you can go by how much he is paying in child support, by what Diddy is paying per month in child support, he nowhere closed to what he tell everyone and the tabloids what he really worth, you be surprised and disappointed what Diddy is really worth, look it up, it on the web, how to calculate child & spruce support payments?
no
No. Alimony is intended to support the ex-spouse (generally, for a limited period of time). Child support is intended to support the children.
Alimony and Spousal Support are the same thing. If you're awarded custody of the children, you'll receive child support. But alimony has nothing to do with whether or not you have children.
Actually, limited time alimony is better to pay than child support. Child support separate from alimony only became common some 40 years ago. Alimony is tax deductible, while child support is not. When calculating child support, alimony is a deductible item from gross earned income on which the calculations are based, thus less child support is ordered. In addition, the alimony adds to the total taxable the other parent, resulting in them taking on a greater obligation in the support of the children. Balancing the benefits of one over the other is something to discuss with a tax accountant. Reducing taxable income, as a result of paying alimony, could bring the obligor into a lower tax bracket. Combining this with the lower child support obligation could actually create an overall savings as compared to just paying child support.
Eileen Baris Luboff has written: 'How to collect your child support & alimony' -- subject(s): Alimony, Child support, Law and legislation
No, that is still your child. Alimony would stop but not child support.
Child support is not recalculated automatically, and there's no reason it would change with the end of alimony.
Ante Usted - 2008 Child Support and Alimony Modifications was released on: USA:20 October 2011
If you live in the US, it's certainly possible that you might be ordered to pay both child support and alimony. Of course, it's also possible that you would only be ordered to pay child support. What the court will order depends on the factors of the case.
Alimony is a deductible item off gross income for both taxes and in calculating the child support obligation. Child support is not a tax deductible item. However, there may be other consideration. See links below.
If you mean child support, yes. If you mean alimony or maintenance, no.
Child support is not mandatory and can be included as a provision of Alimony, which is financially beneficial to the one paying. see link below