After you are eighteen, your parents do not owe you a living. Most parents will support children through high school. Children who remain in their parents' household are meeting the expectations of schooling or have a regular job, contribute to the household through chores or money and, most importantly, are enjoyable members of the household.
In Georgia, a parent can kick their child out at age 18, which is the age of majority in the state. Before that age, parents are responsible for providing care and support for their child.
In Kansas, parents are obligated to provide support for their minor children under the age of 18. Once a child turns 18, the parents are generally not legally required to provide support or housing, and they can ask the child to leave their home. However, if the child is still in high school, the parents may have a legal obligation to continue supporting them until they graduate.
Yes, they can tell them to get out of their home. Once the child is an adult, age 18, the parents are no longer legally responsible for them. They can even charge them with trespassing if they don't leave
No, in Wisconsin, foster parents cannot kick out an 18-year-old foster child who is still in high school. Foster parents have a duty to care for the child until they reach the age of majority or have legally been emancipated. If there are conflicts or concerns, it is best to work with the child welfare agency to find a solution that supports the child's well-being.
Yes, a teenagers parents can kick the teen out at the age of 18. The parents no longer have to support the child after they reach legal age.
they can kick you out at 18 or ditch you in an orphanage
In most places, it is legal for parents to ask their child to leave the home once they turn 18, as they are considered adults. However, parents are still responsible for providing for their child's basic needs until they reach the age of majority, which is typically 18 or 21, depending on the jurisdiction.
In the US, no, a parent can't just kick out their minor child (parents are responsible for providing for their children and that includes providing shelter). However, the parents can make arrangements for that child to live somewhere else, such a military school :)
I'm not aware of any such law. In general in the US, parents are responsible for proving for their minor child. When the child is no longer a minor, the parents are no longer legally responsible. Nearly every state says the age of majority at 18, so parents can kick their 18 year old out if they want with no legal repercussions.
In Kentucky, parents are no longer legally responsible for a child once they turn 18, as individuals are considered legal adults at that age. Parental responsibility typically ends when a child reaches the age of majority, unless specific circumstances arise, such as ongoing financial support agreements or guardianship arrangements.
No a custodial parent can not kick a child out of school if the child is still a minor. If the child is 18 years old, the parent may kick them out.
{| |- | Certainly you can. Once the child reaches the age of majority, 18 in most places, though it is 19 and a couple states and 21 in New York, the parents are no longer responsible for them. There is no requirement to provide them a home after that age. |}