Anonymous wrote:How do you people get away with 300 ish a month in CS?
I'm paying 2500. 2 kids, and I make 140 ish, she makes 60 or so. And she gets use and posession of the house for 3 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you people get away with 300 ish a month in CS?
I'm paying 2500. 2 kids, and I make 140 ish, she makes 60 or so. And she gets use and posession of the house for 3 years.
Are you fifty fifty?
Nah she gets about 2/3.
NP and the thing is it really depends on the facts and circumstances of the case. For example, maybe the kids in the 300 per month scenario do not have daycare expenses and the parent making the $300 payments carries the health insurance in which case they get a credit against their monthly obligation for the cost of the insurance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you people get away with 300 ish a month in CS?
I'm paying 2500. 2 kids, and I make 140 ish, she makes 60 or so. And she gets use and posession of the house for 3 years.
Are you fifty fifty?
Nah she gets about 2/3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you people get away with 300 ish a month in CS?
I'm paying 2500. 2 kids, and I make 140 ish, she makes 60 or so. And she gets use and posession of the house for 3 years.
Are you fifty fifty?
Anonymous wrote:How do you people get away with 300 ish a month in CS?
I'm paying 2500. 2 kids, and I make 140 ish, she makes 60 or so. And she gets use and posession of the house for 3 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a formal CS agreement and my ex is an attorney. It was TBD in our divorce. I was still in the marital home. It was only going to be $300 a month for two kids anyway.
It actually has been fine because he has paid more than that on kids' tuition for a private school (a cheap one but still) and has not asked me to pay.
That will stop next year. It is not worth the fight.
This makes no sense. My understanding is that you cannot just decide not to do it because it is for children. It cannot be waived. There has to be a plan in place. How would a judge sign off on a divorce without child support in place for the children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he lives abroad it may be hard to enforce an order. [/quot]
He lives on the west coast right now, and will be notovated not to have issues with his US passport, I think. Do realize enforcement nay become harder if he is overseas again though
This is a no brainer. You file like yesterday. He will pay because if he doesn’t he risks losing citizenship and getting deported back to his home country. Keep that part to yourself. If he isn’t stupid he already knows this, has no intention of making regular payments, if he remarries and starts another family he definitely won’t.
If I were in his shoes I put you off as long as possible too. File for custody and child support, the only benefit in waiting is that you have gone a longe time period with defacto custody. If I were in your shoes I’d file ASAP. Living with a foot on your neck and taking on the burden of single parenting is no way to live.
OP here- thanks for this insight, you are right he would definitely like to put this off as long as possible. I was waiting for a year after us all being back in the US to make it extend the time post divorce (and in the same country) that he had not shown an interest in getting custody of the children. I don't know if this ultimately matters or not but feel it will be in my favor if needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a formal CS agreement and my ex is an attorney. It was TBD in our divorce. I was still in the marital home. It was only going to be $300 a month for two kids anyway.
It actually has been fine because he has paid more than that on kids' tuition for a private school (a cheap one but still) and has not asked me to pay.
That will stop next year. It is not worth the fight.
This makes no sense. My understanding is that you cannot just decide not to do it because it is for children. It cannot be waived. There has to be a plan in place. How would a judge sign off on a divorce without child support in place for the children.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have a formal CS agreement and my ex is an attorney. It was TBD in our divorce. I was still in the marital home. It was only going to be $300 a month for two kids anyway.
It actually has been fine because he has paid more than that on kids' tuition for a private school (a cheap one but still) and has not asked me to pay.
That will stop next year. It is not worth the fight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he lives abroad it may be hard to enforce an order. [/quot]
He lives on the west coast right now, and will be notovated not to have issues with his US passport, I think. Do realize enforcement nay become harder if he is overseas again though
This is a no brainer. You file like yesterday. He will pay because if he doesn’t he risks losing citizenship and getting deported back to his home country. Keep that part to yourself. If he isn’t stupid he already knows this, has no intention of making regular payments, if he remarries and starts another family he definitely won’t.
If I were in his shoes I put you off as long as possible too. File for custody and child support, the only benefit in waiting is that you have gone a longe time period with defacto custody. If I were in your shoes I’d file ASAP. Living with a foot on your neck and taking on the burden of single parenting is no way to live.
Oops misread was thinking green card. Either way if he travels for work or likes to travel he didn’t want to lose his
Passport. File. He has a baby on the way. Of course he doesn’t want a formal agreement. His lifestyle choices aren’t your problem. Your concern is your family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he lives abroad it may be hard to enforce an order. [/quot]
He lives on the west coast right now, and will be notovated not to have issues with his US passport, I think. Do realize enforcement nay become harder if he is overseas again though
This is a no brainer. You file like yesterday. He will pay because if he doesn’t he risks losing citizenship and getting deported back to his home country. Keep that part to yourself. If he isn’t stupid he already knows this, has no intention of making regular payments, if he remarries and starts another family he definitely won’t.
If I were in his shoes I put you off as long as possible too. File for custody and child support, the only benefit in waiting is that you have gone a longe time period with defacto custody. If I were in your shoes I’d file ASAP. Living with a foot on your neck and taking on the burden of single parenting is no way to live.