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Make your child support payments here. Select an option to get started: I am a Parent. I am an Employer. Announcements. To stay informed, please check here for any new announcements. • If you have a question related to your debit card, please call 1-844-649-9843.
In partnership with the Friend of the Court, Investigators in the Attorney General’s Child Support Division identify parents throughout the State who have the ability to pay support to their children but refuse to do so.
- What Is Child Support?
- Who Pays Child Support?
- Calculation of Child Support
- Uniform Child Support Order
- Collection of Child Support Payments
- Reimbursement For Additional Medical Expenses
- Enforcement of Child Support Orders
- Imputing Income
- State Assistance
- Social Security Benefits
Child support is a parent’s court-ordered payment to help with the costs of raising a child. Child support normally stops when a child turns 18. But a judge can order support for a child who is between 18 and 19 ½ if the child: 1. Attends high school full-time, 2. Has a reasonable expectation of graduating, and 3. Lives full-time with the parent th...
The Michigan Child Support Formula determines which parent will pay child support and the support amount, based on factors including each parent's income and the number of nights per year that the child spends with each parent (called "overnights"). The person who pays child support is the “payer.” The person who gets child support is the “payee.” ...
The amount of child support is calculated using the Michigan Child Support Formula. It takes into account the following factors: 1. The parents’ incomes 2. The number of nights per year ("overnights") the child spends with each parent 3. The number of children supported 4. Health care costs 5. Child care costs 6. Other factors The judge must order ...
To start child support, a judge signs an order called a Uniform Child Support Order (UCSO). The UCSO will include the following obligations: 1. Base support 2. Medical support 3. Childcare expenses The calculation of the base support amount uses both parents' net income and number of parenting time overnights. Medical support includes ordinary and ...
The Michigan State Disbursement Unit (MiSDU) and the FOC work together to collect and distribute child support payments. In most cases, child support payments are automatically withheld from the payer’s wages and MiSDU forwards them to the payee. Both the payer and the payee get a copy of the income withholding order when support is paid this way. ...
For the payee to seek reimbursement of additional medical expenses, they need to show that the ordered total annual ordinary medical expense amount for all children was exceeded.
Child support orders are enforceable whether the order is ex parte, temporary, final, or a modification of a previous order. Some enforcement methods may only be used for the collection of past-due support payments, called “arrearages.” Enforcement methods include: 1. Withholding income from a payer’s wages 2. Placing a lienon a payer’s real or per...
When a parent chooses to reduce or eliminate their income, the judge may decide they have the ability to earn more. In this case, the judge may calculate and order support based on imputed (potential) income. Imputed income is the amount the judge decides the parent has the ability to earn. It is not the amount actually earned. If you believe incom...
When a custodial parent lives apart from the other parent, and the custodial parent and/or the child receives public assistance, MDHHS may seek a child support order in the custodial parent’s name. The custodial parent can’t waive child support in these cases. If the custodial parent gets cash assistance (FIP) for one child, they can get up to $100...
Only Social Security Disability Insurance
SSDI is a social security benefit paid to a person who has a work history and becomes disabled. The amount of SSDI a person gets is based on how much the person has earned in the past. The more work history a person has, the more SSDI they can receive. A parent who receives SSDI (and not Supplemental Security Income, or SSI) can be required to pay child support. SSDI will be counted as income in determining the amount of support. If you get SSDI, your dependent children may be able to get SSD...
Only Social Security Retirement
SSR is a social security benefit based only on work history. A parent who receives only SSR (and not SSI) can be required to pay child support. SSR will be counted as income in determining the amount of support.
Only Supplemental Security Income
SSI is a program that makes monthly payments to elderly, blind, or disabled people with low income and few resources. The basic SSI amount is the same nationwide, although many states, including Michigan, add money to the basic benefit. A parent can’t be forced to pay child support if their only income is SSI. The Michigan Child Support Formula says SSI should not be counted as income when calculating child support. If you are a parent getting SSI, tell the judge. Get a statement from the Soc...
If you owe child support debt (“arrears”) that you can't afford to pay, you can ask for a payment plan to pay a set amount for a certain number of months, and then have the remaining debt canceled.
Learn how child support is calculated in Michigan, as well as how to enforce or change your current child support order. Michigan (like all states) has child support guidelines for calculating the amount of support that divorced or unmarried parents should pay for the benefit of their kids.
The Michigan child support guidelines deal directly with some of the issues of the business owner, including adding deductions like depreciation (which is a tax benefit, but is not an actual expenditure) and expenses such as auto lease payments as income to the business owner.
People also ask
Which parent pays child support in Michigan?
What is the Attorney General's Child Support Division?
How is child support calculated in Michigan?
What are the Michigan Child Support Guidelines?
What happens if a parent doesn't pay child support in Michigan?
Can Michigan courts impute income to a party?
Aug 21, 2024 · LANSING – Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel is recognizing the significant achievements of the Child Support Division, which has been instrumental in identifying parents throughout the State who are capable of paying child support but deliberately refuse to do so.