What You Should Know About Child Support Payments



Posted: Thursday, October 15, 2009

by
Harvey L. Cox Attorney at Law

When parents divorce the court will order one parent to pay the other parent child support. The purpose of this child support payment is to cover expenses of raising the children of the marriage. The exact amount of child support required depends on a lot of different factors.

Generally, the parent who has primary custody of the children is the one who gets the child support payments. Child support payments are determined, in part, by the amount of money the paying parent makes and the number of children who require the support payments.

Child support law specifics are different in every state. To get the specifics for the state in which you live, you need to either discuss the matter with your attorney or do some online research.

Child support is always a point of contention between divorced parents. One of the most common problems is paying parents complaining that the receiving parent is not using the money for the benefit of the children. Paying parents frequently like to use child support as a method of controlling the ex-spouse. They believe that by withholding payment they are controlling the ex-spouse and making it hard for them to survive financially.

Some paying parents simply can't afford to pay. They often find it hard to pay their own living expenses while paying large amounts of money every month in child support. Many times finances change because of remarried, losing a job or developing health problems.

There are millions of dollars in unpaid child support in the United States. Some states are more aggressive than others in trying to collect that unpaid support. Some states, for instance, will refuse to renew your driver's license or your hunting license if you owe unpaid child support. Many state attorney general offices are also intercepting income tax refunds and applying the money to unpaid child support. You should contact an attorney in your state to find out exactly how aggressive your state is at collecting unpaid child support.

Child support can be a financial problem for many divorced people. To lessen that burden, the best course of action during a divorce is for divorcing parents to be reasonable with each other and agree on an amount of support that is both helpful to the receiving parent and not overly burdensome to the paying parent.

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Harvey L. Cox is a licensed attorney, certified mediator and founder of NoLegalese Publishing, a premier self-help legal publishing web site. If you want to know more about your legal rights without the confusing lawyer-talk, go to NoLegalesePublishing.com
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