Absolutely.
Paternity makes you responsible for supporting your own child whether you were married to the mother or not.
If paternity is established, child support is due regardless of marital status.
now that you are married to the father of your child he doesn't pay child support but pays no gives more money to support yours and his child and running the household. good luck
No. If you are not married you pay child support to the custodial guardian, in this case the mother (?), and they take a 26% (?) out of your income to pay for the child. She is also already spending a % of her income. Since you are not married you do not share a income.
You will have to pay child support only after paternity has been established either by presumption (i.e., you two were married at the time), your acknowledgment or genetic testing.
No. He can sign over his rights but he would still be liable to pay child support. The only time he doesn't have to pay child support is if a stepdad wanted to adopt the child, then the biological father doesn't have to pay child support if he signs his rights away.
No. modifications to child support is based on a change in income, or should you become unemployed or disabled.
If you are married to the mother, no. Then you share everything naturally. But if you have a child and you are separated or not married to the mother, and you do not have custody of the children, you have to pay child support
of course
Serena is married - child support is not an issue for her.
If the court has said you are to pay child support, your marital status does not matter.
You might have to pay child support if you were married to the mother when the child was conceived/born, or if you signed an acknowledgment of paternity.
Yes. The point is not whether you were married or not but that that is your child you are obligated to care for.
A parent who is TANF eligible should not have to pay child support.
No. You will still have to pay child support for your children.
No, when married the minor becomes emancipated.
No. Only the biological parents pay for their child regardless of who they marry.
Yes.
Yes. Another man is not going to have to pay for your child just because he is married to the mother. Only the biological parents pay for their child.