What Factors Are Used To Calculate Child Support Payments? Can The Amount Of The Payment Change Over Time?
Under the Child Support Enforcement Act of 1984, child support payments are based upon each parent's current income. This includes a number of elements including: occupational wages, assets such as stocks and bonds, welfare benefits. Other factors include the custodial parent's living expenses and the standard of living of the child before divorce, the specific needs of the child; i.e. health insurance, educational needs, and applicable day care expenses, and the noncustodial parent's ability to pay. However, under such circumstances as incarceration, pastdue child support would continue to accumulate (overdue payments are called arrearages or arrears), and the noncustodial parent would be responsible for paying pastdue payments when released, either immediately or in installments, as mandated by a court of law.
Child support payments can be modified over time for reasons such as an increase in either parent's earningsthis can include additional income from remarriage, a decrease in income due to a job change, a change in custodyin which the child support order may be reversed, a change in the amount of time the child spends with each parent, or the specific needs of a child or either parent change due to a medical disability, etc.
Other Child Support Father Right FAQs
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Q:
What Is Child Support, And How Is Child Support Determined?
A: Child support is a periodic payment made to a custodial parent from a noncustodial parent to help compensate a child's living expenses, i.e. food, clothes, etc., … More -
Q:
How Long Must A Parent Provide Child Support?
A: Under California law, a parent's obligation to pay child support continues until the child becomes 18 years old, or the child is 19, unmarried, and attending high … More -
Q:
Is A Father Who Never Married The Mother Still Required To Pay Child Support? What If The Father Is Not Allowed To See The Child?
A: Regardless of marital status, an ‘assumed father' is any biological father of a child for whom paternity has been established by either the admission of the … More -
Q:
What Happens To A Father Who Refuses To Pay Court Ordered Child Support?
A: Under the Child Support Enforcement Act of 1984, it is against the law for any father, presumed or assumed, to not pay court ordered child support to the custodial … More -
Q:
What Remedies Are Available To A Father If He Believes His Child Support Order Is Unfair?
A: Unless previously ruled by a court of law, fathers have the same parental rights as mothers in regard to their children, and those who believe they are a product of an … More
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