Of course! The amount of support will decrease per child, based on the number of children he is supporting. However, he will owe child support for each of his children that he is not the custodial parent of.
Of course.
Yes, of course. In general, child support is a percentage of net income. When calculating support for younger children, support actually ordered and paid for older children is subtracted from net income.
Yes. There is no limit of children where you get out of paying. That is what Birth Control is for. You should only have as many as you can afford.
Yes, you helped bring those children into the world and need to help support them.
if your divorced and the man i think so if your the laddie i don't think so
Of course. There is no limit of children where you get out of paying. That is what birth control is for, so you only have as many as you can afford.
Yes, up to 55% of his gross income.
no because if you had a baby with another man your ex husband does not pay you with more child support because that is not his child
the answer is unclear if she is working then yes it does but if she isn't then no unless the child is desabled then you still get child support
Yes, in numerous cases.
yes...if the father has custody of the child or children then a woman has to pay child support just like a man.
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
Yes. It does not matter how many children someone has fathered, one still has to pay for child support for all his children. However, in many states, child support PER CHILD is reduced because of the number of children a parent has to support. However, the total amount paid will be higher. Also, a father does not have to pay child support if his parental rights were terminated and the child was adopted by someone else.
No, only the biological parents are responsible for the financial support of their minor children.
A woman has no authority to put a man on child support, it must be ordered by a judge after proving that the man is the father of the child. If you have another child from the same man, child support is not automatic, you must petition the judge to review the situation after each child. If the mother and father are both consenting adults, they can make as many babies as they like, but that does not mean they should. Your relationship is your business. Children born to a single mother can become public business and a judge may determine the consequences. Some of the consequences could be ordering child support from the father, denying additional child support (not likely), or ordering the children be remanded to the custody of the state if a single parent is not able to provide for the child adequately.
Yes. It is only fair that the mother has to pay child support. It is no different than if a woman and a man had separated and the mother was a single mother that he would have to pay child support. It is about the welfare of the children, not about who is taking care of the children.
That's dependent on the individual state laws.
Child support is based on a percentage of net income. If he is also paying support for older children in another family(ies), that will reduce his net income available for your children.Also, it is affected by any alimony paid.
Yes. Your child is your financial responsibility, and the fact that others are forcing the state to support other children does not relieve you of your obligation. State laws govern the determination of the INDIVIDUAL financial needs of offspring, and you should advise your counsel if you feel your support is being inflated by the costs of maintaining children not your own.