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tofer11

Junior Member
What is the name of your state? Illinois
I have been divorced for over 10years now with 13 year old kid. Since living in Illinois I have moved to Idaho and now have a family with 7 year old kid. Recently I have started to pay child support that I can not afford? And another question if I pay child support, don't I have visitation rights to see the kid in Illinois?
What would be the amount set for me to pay child support?
Any advise would be helpful
 


CJane

Senior Member
What is the name of your state? Illinois
I have been divorced for over 10years now with 13 year old kid. Since living in Illinois I have moved to Idaho and now have a family with 7 year old kid. Recently I have started to pay child support that I can not afford?
Support for the child in IL?

And another question if I pay child support, don't I have visitation rights to see the kid in Illinois?
Nope.

What would be the amount set for me to pay child support?
With an IL order? The amount would be 25% of your net income per month. Google "illinois child support calculator" and input the numbers.

Any advise would be helpful
Stop making babies.
 

LdiJ

Senior Member
Support for the child in IL?



Nope.



With an IL order? The amount would be 25% of your net income per month. Google "illinois child support calculator" and input the numbers.



Stop making babies.
Its 20%, not 25%.
 

CJane

Senior Member
Its 20%, not 25%.
Sorry. I thought Illinois was 25% and TX was 20%.

Sorry OP.

But.... um... OP... Google IS your friend. Really. You should totally use it sometime.

I did. And look what I found!

Number of Children/ Percent of Non-Custodial Parent's Net Income

1 / 20%

2 / 28%

3 / 32%

4 / 40%

5 / 45%

6 or more / 50%


The guidelines in the chart are applied to each case unless the court makes a finding that the amount determined in the guidelines would be inappropriate after considering the best interests of the child. Relevant factors for deviations may include but are not limited to:

The financial resources and needs of the child(ren);
The financial resources and needs of the custodial parent;
Standard of living the child(ren) would have enjoyed had the marriage not been dissolved, the separation not occurred, or if the parties had married;
The physical and emotional condition of the child(ren) and their educational needs; and
The financial resources and needs of the non-custodial parent.

Net income is the total of all income from all sources, minus the following deductions:
Federal income tax;
State income tax;
Social Security (FICA);
Mandatory retirement contributions;
Union dues;
Dependent and individual health/hospitalization insurance premiums;
Prior obligations of support or maintenance actually paid pursuant to a court order or administrative order;
Expenses to repay debts that represent reasonable and necessary expenses for the production of income;
Medical expenses necessary to preserve life or health; and
Reasonable expenses for the benefit of the child and the other parent, exclusive of gifts.
If net income cannot be determined, the court shall order support in an amount considered reasonable in the particular case.

If net income cannot be determined in administrative cases, the Department uses a standard amount based on the state_s minimum wage to arrive at the monthly support obligation. The Department is given the authority to establish support through an administrative process. Support orders established through this process have the same force and effect as a judicial order. (45 CFR 300.0 or 89 IL Administrative Code, Sec. 160.60 or 305 ILCS 5/Art. X).
There's even a worksheet.

http://www.ilchildsupport.com/calculating.html
 
Last edited:

Zephyr

Senior Member
wasn't your visitation with the child from your first marriage handled as part of your divorce? did you modify that court order to reflect the long distance when you moved?

child support and visitation are two seperate issues- neither is dependant on the other
 

tofer11

Junior Member
If I was going to lower child support would it be considered from Idaho or Illinois?
Divorce was final in Illinois. Is it hard to change child support, I have fought for that in many years wihtout any luck. Curently I make about $1800/month and pay $409/month. It does seem very high but everywhere I go, no luck.
 

CJane

Senior Member
If I was going to lower child support would it be considered from Idaho or Illinois?
Divorce was final in Illinois. Is it hard to change child support, I have fought for that in many years wihtout any luck. Curently I make about $1800/month and pay $409/month. It does seem very high but everywhere I go, no luck.
Your calculations would still follow IL guidelines.

20% of 1800 is 360. So your support isn't completely out of line with that, especially if there are any arrears on the account. Are there?

Generally, there needs to be a change of more than 20 or 25 or sometimes 30% in the amount due before CS will be changed. I don't think $46 is gonna do it... again, especially if there are arrears owed.
 

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