answersLogoWhite

0

Child support usually ends when the child reaches 18 AND graduates high school, OR the age of 20 if the child has not graduated high school.

Child Support works until "Said sum shall continue until the "child(ren) shall have married, died, become self-supporting, or reach the age of eighteen."

This is taken stright from the MARITAL SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT from a standard North Carolina Divorce Packet from the Circuit Clerk's Office.

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Does the North Carolina state automatically end child support?

No they do not.


If you are 17 and are married are you automatically emancipated from your parents custody in North Carolina?

no


Federal agricultural assistance payments to North Carolina farmers are an example of?

expenditures.


After filing for child support in New York you move to North Carolina can her father refile in North Carolina?

Jurisdiction can be transferred


What is the age that child support stops in North Carolina?

16


Do you have to pay child support if child goes to college in North Carolina?

no


How long can someone be in jail for child support in north Carolina?

45 days


Who is Merle Haggard's support opening act?

The Malpass Brothers from North Carolina.


What was the reason for settlement in North Carolina?

The settlers in North Carolina were attracted to the temperate climate and the access to the ocean for shipping and fishing. North Carolina also had many rivers and lakes to support settlers with fresh water.


What are some cities in North Carolina without a letter e?

· Burlington, North Carolina · Cary, North Carolina · Durham, North Carolina · High Point, North Carolina · Kitty Hawk, North Carolina · Morgantown, North Carolina · Oxford, North Carolina · Salisbury, North Carolina · Wilmington, North Carolina


Which southern states is north of South Carolina?

North Carolina is north of South Carolina


By North Carolina law is the wife of man that owes child support be made to pay?

no