Unless you are producing children as a side business to being a prostitute, the money received is not income to show a loss on.
Yes, Section 8 only counts child support payments as income when they become regular. If you are not receiving the payment than they wont count it as income.
No. The roommate is not related to you in any legal sense, therefore their income does not come into the picture when figuring your means of child support payments or the receiving of such payments thereof.
Generally, child support payments coincide with the frequency that the obligor receives income. How quickly the obligee receives those payments is a function of how efficient the payor of income is in forwarding them to the State and how efficient the State is in distributing them.
If you are receiving benefits from Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), child support can be taken from your SSDI payments. However, if you are receving Supplemental Security Income, that cannot be seized for child support.
Presuming you mean for taxes...as for lenders and such the answer may be different. No. Child support payments are neither deductible by the payor nor taxable to the payee. When you total your gross income to see if you are required to file a tax return, do not include child support payments received.
Yes the SSI payments amount would be counted as a part of your support income assistance that you are receiving for your necessary living expenses.
ALL of the other sources of worldwide income that you may be receiving or could be receiving that is NOT for your DISABILITY. If you are receiving social security disability insurance payments for your disability then you are receiving A TYPE OF DISABILITY INCOME. Or some other company paid or privately paid premiums of DISABILITY INSURANCE PAYMENTS that you could be receiving for your disability. It is possible for some of the amounts of the above types of disability payment could also become taxable income to you on your 1040 federal income tax return.
Spousal support payments would not be deductible on your income tax return. Only Alimony payments would be deductible on your 1040 income tax return.
In most cases NO. However, student loans, child support and taxes payments aren't exempted from granishment.
No.
The judge will be the one that will decide the how much if any income support you may be qualified to receive from the payer of the support amount.
only child support. Spousal support is taxable income.