Life may have changed since the court ordered child support for your child, and you may need to change the order.
The court can only modify the order after 3 kinds of changes:
It does not matter if you pay child support or you get child support. If either parent's life has changed in any of these 3 ways, you can ask the court to modify the order.
Important
If the court changes the order, the change only goes back to the time you “served” the other parent with the Complaint to change the order. It is important to file and serve a Complaint to Modify as soon as you know you need to change the order.
This article has information about when you can change a child support order, and what kind of changes you can ask for.
When can I get the child support order changed?You can ask the court to change the child support order if there has been a change in one or both parents’ finances or a change in health insurance choices.
The financial change must be:
Some changes that can cause a parent’s income to go up or down are:
You can ask the court to change:
If the court changes your child support order, the new order only goes back to the date the Complaint for Modification was “served”. The “served” date is the date the other parent gets the Summons and Complaint about the case. See how to serve a defendant.
The new order does not go back to the date that your job or health care changed.
You cannot change the amount of money you get or money you owe before the “served” date.
For example:
You pay child support but you lose your job on July 12th.
You file a Complaint for Modification on August 20th.
The other parent gets the Summons (official notice) and Complaint on August 24th.
The court changes your child support order on September 18th. The court decides you should pay less money.
You pay less money starting on August 24th, not on July 12th.
If you and the other parent filed a Joint Petition/Motion to Change a Judgment/Temporary Order, the change goes back to the date you filed.