Many family courts establish a pre-set calculation for child support amounts based on each parent’s financial abilities. Whether the payor decides to fulfill their court mandated obligation is another question and there can be many reasons why these payments stop:
From a legal standpoint, however, courts generally view:
For organizations like NASDF that work with divorcing families, this highlights an important reality: many child support enforcement problems are not purely financial. They are often rooted in a breakdown of the parent-child relationship and unresolved emotional conflict between the parents. Addressing those underlying issues can sometimes improve compliance more effectively than enforcement alone.
Regarding a payor’s inability to pay due to a job loss, temporary disability, death or business bankruptcy, there is now an insurance policy that will cover for these unexpected circumstances called Support Insured. It’s an exclusive product that only the National Association for Single and Divorced Families members can receive but joining the association only costs $19 per month. It will continue the payment schedule for up to one-year and it automatically renews every year until the obligation contractually expires.
Finally, some states do require that life insurance be included in the divorce settlement to ensure if the payor dies, the child support and alimony payments will typically continue until the children reaches 18 years or, if they are in college, it can cover educational costs and living expenses.
The perfect combination to ensure payments continue due to life circumstances would be to include a long-term life policy with Support Insured. For more information, please visit NASDF.org and click on the Support Insured tab.