Anonymous wrote:I think this is a bad idea and sounds like he is trying to get you to accept less money in order to have a custody arrangement that just makes sense. Is he really going to drive them from another county to go to school? Or is he threatening to pull them from their current school to also get you to accept less in child support? If you're the parent living in the child's current school district you have reasonable odds of getting what you want without giving up more money.
Think long and hard about the consequences of giving up more than you or your kids deserve in terms of money. I'm currently in my 50s caring for my mother in her 80s and she's running out of money...I just realized all along my mom could have claimed a portion of my dad's social security benefits, but never did. My mom also focused on getting full custody and didn't ask for a portion of his retirement savings either. She's been fine but has been tight on money her whole retirement because she didn't start saving for retirement until after their divorce when she was in her 40s. Just don't leave money you're entitled to on the table while you're also taking on more of the child care burden as well!
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone waived or accepted a very small amount of child support in exchange for getting primary custody of kids? Is that a bad idea? I make 200K/year working as an attorney and think I have a stable enough job. My priority is to keep my kids for the weekdays so there is no disruption in their school routine. Dad lives in another county.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone waived or accepted a very small amount of child support in exchange for getting primary custody of kids? Is that a bad idea? I make 200K/year working as an attorney and think I have a stable enough job. My priority is to keep my kids for the weekdays so there is no disruption in their school routine. Dad lives in another county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he has them every weekend and you have them before and after work during the week, you are probably both spending about equal amounts of time with them / actively engaged and parenting. He might even be spending more time with the kids if he has Friday evening and all day Saturday and Sunday and you are spending Mon-Fri before work and Mon to Thurs after work. So forgoing child support makes sense. The time spent with kids is about 50/50 even if the official custody wouldn't be as it uses overnights.
Typical dead beat mentality. Fun weekends are not 50/50. Excluding all dentist, doctor, etc visits is not 50/50.
Anonymous wrote:Child support is for the kids/ In my state you can’t negotiate with the kids money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Legally, it's pretty difficult to do this in most states, because the child has the legal right to the money, not you, and it's not in the child's best interest to waive.
However, I know a couple people who did this informally. There's no legal document or enforcement, but dad agreed to let mom have primary custody, and mom doesn't go after him for child support.
I don’t think courts will undo a voluntary agreement where one parent does not seek child support or all the child support they may be entitled to.
They absolutely will, and sometimes will even order backpay. The parent waiving support can change their mind at any point and seek child support. Some states even allow the child to go after backpay child support after they turn 18.
It's very risky for the parent not paying.
Anonymous wrote:If he has them every weekend and you have them before and after work during the week, you are probably both spending about equal amounts of time with them / actively engaged and parenting. He might even be spending more time with the kids if he has Friday evening and all day Saturday and Sunday and you are spending Mon-Fri before work and Mon to Thurs after work. So forgoing child support makes sense. The time spent with kids is about 50/50 even if the official custody wouldn't be as it uses overnights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Legally, it's pretty difficult to do this in most states, because the child has the legal right to the money, not you, and it's not in the child's best interest to waive.
However, I know a couple people who did this informally. There's no legal document or enforcement, but dad agreed to let mom have primary custody, and mom doesn't go after him for child support.
I don’t think courts will undo a voluntary agreement where one parent does not seek child support or all the child support they may be entitled to.
Anonymous wrote:Legally, it's pretty difficult to do this in most states, because the child has the legal right to the money, not you, and it's not in the child's best interest to waive.
However, I know a couple people who did this informally. There's no legal document or enforcement, but dad agreed to let mom have primary custody, and mom doesn't go after him for child support.