Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Lone parents

Use our Single Parent forum to speak to other parents raising a child alone.

Can someone explain this to me Co Parenting.

5 replies

VioletV · 30/06/2011 16:20

Hi All,

If you were to go via the courts and have joint co parenting, so 5050, would you or would you not receive maintenance from the ex partner?

As in you're the mother, the father takes you to court for 50% he happens to win, does he still have to pay support to you?

Thanks.

OP posts:
marycorporate · 30/06/2011 17:12

Which ever one of you claims the family benefit gets the maintenance off of the other one. That is something they will decide upon in court. It often goes in the mother's favour tbh.
Bear in mind though that if it is you who is to receive maintenance, the figure will reduce by 1/7th for every night they are at their dad's. Check out the online CSA calculator (google it) to see what the figures are. If they are with their dad 50% of the time you would fall in to the '175 days or over' category.

VioletV · 30/06/2011 17:24

Thanks Mary. I'm just trying to figure out how it works. What do you mean as 175 days over?

OP posts:
marycorporate · 30/06/2011 17:30

If you look on the calculator here there is a drop down option that suggests the amount of days per year the non resident parent (in your case which ever of you doesnt claim the family benefit) has the child or children. With a 50/50 split, your ex will have the children 182.5 nights a year (half of 365)
So he will fall in to the 175 days or more category.

They do this so that the non resident parent isn't paying for the child/ren on days when the children are actually with them. Otherwise they are paying for the child twice, in effect.

You can arrange between the 2 of you that if there is 50/50 shared care, neither of you pays maintenance, but that is between you. Legally, the CSA rules apply.

In court they may apply something else, particularly if your ex or yourself have a higher income than the other. But be wary, this is only enforceable for 12 months, then it can, if either of you wish, revert to the CSA rules quite simply.

They don't often explain that so you start to rely on the amount that the court rule, only to find yourself skint 12 months later.

VioletV · 30/06/2011 17:33

Ok that makes sense. Thanks for your help, Mary.

OP posts:
gillybean2 · 03/07/2011 04:56

Shared care doesn't necessarily mean that the time will also be 50/50.
So you can agree to the shared residency and then negotiate on the time spent with each parent.

www.spig.clara.net/

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread