Child support, is based on the needs of the child and the economic situation of the parents.
Child support is primarily determined by what it takes to provide the child with a reasonable standard of living, based on what the two divorced parents have available. Sole custody indicates that the child will be living solely (with limited visitation) with a just one of the parents. Thus, that parent will be responsible for providing the vast majority of the food, clothes, etc. that the child will be using. The non-custodial parent now no longer will be providing those (if they had shared custody). So it is likely that the court will also modify the child support requirement - either reducing the amount the custodial parent had been paying the now non-custodial parent, or increasing the amount that the now non-custodial parent had been paying the now custodial parent.
The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent.The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent.The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent.The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent.
no, but might affect your custody.
no
Child support is determined according to state guidelines and physical custody is one of the factors used to determine the amount.
yes, it absolutely will. However, there are a couple of different ways it may affect your credit rating depending on your circumstances and how your child support payments are collected.
No, if the wife is not an authorized user on the credit card then it does not affect the wife's credit report. So the late payment will only be on the husband credit report.
Custody will only be affected if the step-parent is an unfit parent, abuses the child, or is a registered sex offender.
The name given the child does not affect custody. The court looks at the ability of the parent to provide a stable environment with the means to support the child.
No. The child support order remains in effect until it is modified by the court. Marriage by either parent does not normally affect child support.
Yes. But it doesn't affect support payments. That is still determined by the state, not EITHER parent.
No, visitation and child support are 2 separate entities. The only way this would affect your support amount is if you are set up with 50-50 custody and the child stops going to the other parents house and you take them to court to get primary custody.
In general, remarriage should not increase or decrease one's child support obligation, regardless of the new spouse's income or the presence of stepchildren.