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CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com is the best way to find Illinois child custody, child support, and child visitation lawyers and family law attorneys, along with Illinois laws and information.

To find a checked out family lawyer, enter your city and state, above, and click "Find My Lawyer."

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Illinois Child Custody, Child Support
and Child Visitation Lawyers

Child Support, Child Custody and Visitation in Illinois

The laws of Illinois governing child custody and child support are contained in the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, which may be are found at this link for child custody and visitation and at this link for child support.

To fully understand Illinois law, it may be necessary to read and interpret statutes with case law and regulatory law. It is also important to know if law is up to date. For these and other reasons, it is always best to consult with a qualified family law attorney to know how the law applies to your particular situation. The following legal summaries are not intended as legal advice and should not be relied on as such. They are intended only as an introduction to the way that the law functions in these areas.

Child Support in Illinois

Child support is the court-ordered payment by one parent to the custodial parent of a minor child, generally after divorce or separation. In Illinois, a court may order parents to pay an amount reasonable and necessary for the child’s support.

Child support in Illinois is calculated as a function of the obligor’s net income(the "obligor" is the parent paying support). “Net income” means income from all sources. Defining “net income” sounds simple, but there are many complicating factors.

Once a parent's net income is determined, courts generally will apply certain guidelines defined in the law to determine the minimum amount of child support. The guidelines are:

  Number of Children   Percentage of Supporting Party's Net Income
  1   20%
  2   28%
  3   32%
  4   40%
  5   45%
  6 or more   50%
The above guidelines are applied by courts unless a court determines that application of the guidelines would be inappropriate, after considering the best interests of the child.

In determining “the best interests of the child,” the court may consider evidence regarding a variety of factors, including (but not limited to):

  • • The financial resources and needs of the child
  • • The financial resources and needs of the custodial parent
  • • The standard of living the child would have enjoyed had the marriage not been dissolved
  • • The physical and emotional condition of the child, and his educational needs
  • • The financial resources and needs of the non-custodial parent.
There are other factors that may affect the amount of child support an individual is required to pay.

Child support generally ends when children turn 18 unless the child is still attending high school, in which case support may be extended to the age of 19. After that, child support terminates unless there is an agreement to the contrary. It may be possible, however, to extend child support children beyond the child’s 19th birthday even if the child is not attending college. For example, where a child suffers educational and learning disabilities, Illinois law permits child support to continue beyond the age of majority.

A helpful Illinois child support calculator is available here.

Child Custody in Illinois

Illinois recognizes two basic forms of child custody: joint custody and sole custody. Custody determinations are based on “the best interest of the child.”

Illinois law provides out eight specific factors that must be considered in making any custody determination:

  • • the wishes of the child's parent
  • • the wishes of the child as to custody
  • • the interaction and interrelationship of the child with his parent or parents, his siblings and any other person who may significantly affect the child's best interest
  • • the child's adjustment to his home, school and community
  • • the mental and physical health of all individuals involved
  • • the physical violence or threat of physical violence by the child's potential custodian, whether directed against the child or directed against another person
  • • the occurrence of ongoing abuse (as defined in Section 103 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986) whether directed against the child or directed against another person
  • • the willingness and ability of each parent to facilitate and encourage a close and continuing relationship between the other parent and the child.

Child Visitation in Illinois

Under Illinois law, a non-custodial parent generally has a right to reasonable visitation unless a court determines that visitation would endanger the child’s health or wellbeing (in which case, a court might deny or restrict visitation). In determining what is “reasonable” visitation, a court may take into account a variety of factors, including the age of the child and the circumstances and location of visitation.

Finding your Illinois Family Lawyer

CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com provides the best way to find Illinois child custody lawyers, child support lawyers, and child visitation lawyers and attorneys, along with Illinois state child custody, child support, and child visitation laws and information.

To find the right family lawyer for you, it's critical to use a method that makes sense. Two common methods make little sense:

Advertisements & Attorney Listing Services

Is the family lawyer with the biggest ad in the phone book the best family lawyer for you? Not likely. It's easy to see why you might not find the attorney who's right for you through an advertisement.

How about services that merely list attorneys, often on websites? Are they any better? Probably not. Listing services are typically just advertisements. Like the phone book, cash is usually the only criteria for a service to list a family lawyer.

Ask yourself: Do listing services screen attorneys in any way?

Do they check …

  • • References of other attorneys?
  • • References of former clients?
  • • If a family lawyer has a disciplinary history?
  • • If a family lawyer is properly licensed in Illinois?
  • • If family law or family law a significant part of a lawyer's practice?

Listing services typically fail to answer any of these questions. They simply leave it up to you.

Client Referrals

Client (non-lawyer) referrals usually make little sense. Why? Because clients rarely know enough about the process of practicing law to understand what their family lawyer actually did for them. Or to understand if their family lawyer did a quality job for them compared to other family lawyers.

Could they have achieved a better result with another attorney? Were the results achieved by the family lawyer typical for that lawyer?

It's not that client referrals can't be helpful, but they should be only one of several criteria that a person uses to hire an attorney.

The CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com Method

CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com provides the best way to find a quality, prescreened Illinois family lawyer in your area. What do we mean by prescreened? We mean that we do the hard part. It's free, easy, and confidential.

We have a lawyer who works for us check out family lawyers and family lawyers for you, by doing out the following:

  • (1). We make sure family law or family law is a substantial part of the lawyer's practice
  • (2). We make sure the family lawyers are properly licensed in Illinois
  • (3). We make sure the family lawyers have no public record of professional discipline
  • (4). We speak to three former clients of the family lawyer who have had favorable experiences
  • (5). We speak to three other attorneys who speak highly of the family lawyer and their expertise in family law
There are over 60,000 lawyers who are resident, active attorneys in Illinois. In order to check out the licensure and public disciplinary record for any Illinois lawyer, visit http://www.iardc.org/lawyersearch.asp.

You can do some of what we do yourself. You can use our How to Check Out Lawyers page to check out a specific Illinois family lawyer who you are already thinking about using. You can also use the links to check out any other Illinois lawyer. Alternatively, you can use CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com to learn more about verified Illinois family lawyers who we've already checked out.

Our Illinois family lawyers cover the entire state of Illinois and include lawyers located in Chicago, Aurora, Rockford, Joliet, Naperville, Springfield, Peoria, Elgin, Chicago Loop, Chicago South Side, Chicago North Side, Lincoln Park, Wicker Park, Uptown, Cook County, DuPage County, Kane County, Lake County, Madison County, McHenry County, St. Clair County, Will County, Winnebago County, Champaign County, Sangamon County, Peoria County, and McLean County.
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