Yes, 3% simple
yes
Yes. Child support will continue to acrue regardless of your ability to pay unless you take the matter back to the courts and get the amount lowered. Your child support will never be zero, however. If you do not pay child support, it becomes arrears and the state tacks on interest to the late payment, up to 10% in some states.
In general, child support is late if it is not received by the due date.
one week they will tell you to call your local domestics and the will go throgh enforcement .
No, there is no need for child support this late.
A child support statement is included on the Texas marriage license application and states, "I AM NOT PRESENTLY DELINQUENT IN THE PAYMENT OF COURT-ORDERED CHILD SUPPORT. TRUE FALSE." This has been the law in Texas since September 1995. HOWEVER, it also makes sense that you should not remarry until you have your financial house in order. Marriages based on sound financial principles last longer. Also, you will be charged 6% interest on late payments.
Unfortunately, yes.
Yes. Visitation cannot be denied because of lack of payment of child support. The child support still needs to be paid because there could be jail time involved if there is too much owed and late. BUT, you cannot use visitation priveledges as retribution because (its the law, and) the visitation is for the children, not yourself. The child support is there to assist in the expences of raising children.
The creditor can charge you a late payment fee and report you late to the credit bureaus. One 30 day late payment can lower your credit score 90 points and cause you higher interest rates and cost you more money in the future. You can try to contact your creditor and ask to have the late payment removed if you have paid on time. You can also dispute it to the credit bureaus and try to have it removed that way.
Pay up your arrears before applying. The military does not allow late child support.
A mother can file for child support from the birth of the child until the child is eighteen or nineteen depending on the age of majority in the particular jurisdiction.
No. But what will be charged on a late fee, will be reflected on something known as your your finance charges. Finance charges will go up if you are late making a payment on your credit card.