So, how do you handle child support and holiday gifts with your child’s other parent? Do they have an obligation to contribute more during these extra expensive seasons of the year? Can child support payments even be used for gifts? Or will you, as the custodial parent, bear the burden of these extra costs? Keep reading as we dive into a legal analysis for navigating child support and holiday gifts.
One way to mitigate future tension and disagreements around holiday expenses is to address your plans proactively in your custody agreement. While the division of holiday gift expenses is certainly not a central term in a custody agreement, it can be included along with the parents’ plans for sharing holiday time with their children.
A parent who is obligated to pay child support cannot substitute a payment with gifts because child support is intended to provide for the child’s basic living expenses and specifically aid the custodial parent in providing the majority of the child’s basic needs.
However, if you are receiving child support from your child’s other parent, your ex cannot dictate how, exactly, you are using that money. You have a legal obligation to provide for your child’s basic needs and to use your income and/or the child support payments you receive to do so. Your ex’s child support payments are calculated based on a standard formula to determine how much support their child is entitled to based on that parent’s income and several other factors. If this amount, combined with your own income, is more than enough to provide for your child’s basic needs, you can use any extra money to buy gifts for your child. Your child’s other parent cannot dictate how you spend the child support.
Many families are facing difficult economic times and making it through the holiday season is even more of a challenge when you are operating as a single income household. For most single parents, while child support is helpful and needed, it often does not leave the custodial parent free from financial stress. For many parents, this financial burden is not just a feeling but a reality.
If you are struggling to purchase Christmas gifts for your child, there are several New Jersey organizations to help you. Through the Angel Tree Program, the Salvation Army collects donation presents from the community and distributes them to families in need. Many churches in New Jersey also conduct gift drives for distribution to children in the community.
Beyond gifts, holidays like Thanksgiving can also bring burdensome grocery expenses, which some single parents may not be able to afford on their own. Fortunately, efforts like the New Jersey Association’s Turkey Drive and the Community Foodbank of New Jersey’s Turkey Drive exist to help families navigate these challenges. These initiatives distribute turkeys and other essential food items to those in need.
You will be required to show a change in circumstance, either financially for you or your ex, your child’s needs, or another factor that is impacting your child’s need for more support. Keep in mind that your perceived need for additional financial support from your ex may not be shared by the court. The unfortunate reality is that, as long as the child support amount is still legally appropriate, your child’s other parent is not legally required to purchase the child additional gifts unless, of course, your custody agreement stipulates that they do.
Before you petition for a modification of your child support order, you will want to be clear on the amount of support you are likely to be awarded. In difficult economic times, you might feel the impact of financial hardship, even if the child support you receive is legally appropriate. A knowledgeable New Jersey family lawyer at Montanari Law Group can help you make this determination and assess whether you are likely to be awarded a modification of child support.
Our family lawyers collect and present the evidence to support a modification in a compelling way to the court and negotiate with your child’s other parent or their lawyer to try to reach a resolution. For more information, to set up a review of your case, and to get a free consultation with a skilled family law attorney, don’t hesitate to get in touch with us today at (973) 233-4396. We serve clients in Montclair, Montvale, Elmwood Park, Ridgewood, Pompton Lakes, and throughout Passaic, Bergen, and Essex County and the greater Northern New Jersey area.
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