This will most likely sound rude to the person who asked the question, but i will answer in a very direct way. Stay at home! Unless you are truly ready to be an independent legal entity you should stay at home. This should include a steady job that pays more than minimum wage, a sizable amount of savings that would sustain an individual through rent, food, and other essentials that are often taken for granted. I recently left home to live on my own (at 18 i might add)... this has been the hardest transition for me ever. Food, laundry, heat and air conditioning, car problems, making rent, all these things severely limit the ability of someone to live a life that they think is any better than what they have now. My advice is stay at home and tough it out! i know it will be hard but make sure you get a job (or keep it if you have it)... save as much as you can...try in the $5,000 range to be able to afford all the initial shocks of living on your own. you will quickly see this dwindle down to very little and you will be working very hard to try and keep up with the bills! Stay at home and save every penny you can and when you turn 18 if it is completely unbearable, move out with a large sum that you can live on!
Best of luck
There is no emancipation statute in Ohio.
You cannot become emancipated from a sibling because you do not owe them anything. Unless the court had ruled that an older sibling should take care of you, there are no legal obligations.
Georgia does not currently have an emancipation statute.
No, you are not emancipated because you have a child. Having a child does not mean one has the ability to take care of yourself. You do have certain rights as to obtaining assistance for you and your child, but you are still the responsibility of your parents until you turn 18.
To become emancipated at the age of 19, you typically need to file a petition with the court in your state. You must demonstrate that you can financially support yourself and make independent decisions. A court will consider factors such as your maturity, living situation, and ability to handle your own affairs before granting emancipation.
1 yeaer
At age eighteen you are beyond adoption, you would become emancipated (in the US).
You have to be farmer in older to become a landowner.
No. Being able to have a kid doesn't mean they have the ability to take care of themselves and their child. The state does not wish to have them become a ward of the state.
take a test and an oath aka naturalization
No, you are not emancipated automatically when you are pregnant or once you have your child. It does not mean one has the ability to take care of yourself. You do have certain rights as to obtaining assistance for you and your child, but you are still the responsibility of your parents until you turn 18.
First of all they have to be in a jurisdiction that allows emancipation. Then you apply to the court and show how you can take care and support yourself.