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CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com is the best way to find Michigan child custody, child support, and child visitation lawyers and family law attorneys, along with Michigan 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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Michigan Child Custody, Child Support and Child Visitation Lawyers

Child Support, Child Custody and Visitation in Michigan

The laws of Michigan governing child support, child custody and visitation are contained in the Michigan Compiled Laws, available at this link.

To fully understand Michigan 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 Michigan

Child support is a court-ordered payment by one parent to the custodial parent of a minor child, generally after divorce or separation. In cases where both parents have equal custody, the child support will be based on the finances of both parents.

Calculation:

Child support in Michigan is calculated on the basis of "the Income Shares Model." The monthly support amount is determined by proportionally dividing each parent's income. These two support amounts are then offset to establish which parent will pay the other parent for support of the child. The child support amount may be modified if the financial circumstances of any spouse changes. However, the court will not modify the child support amount "retroactively”. Detailed information on calculating Michigan child support may be found here.

Continuation of Child Support beyond 18th Birthday:

The Court could order the continuation of child support beyond 18 years of age, if it finds the child is regularly attending high school on a full time basis with a reasonable expectation of completing sufficient credits to graduate from high school while residing on a full-time basis with the recipient of support or at an institution, but in no case after the child reaches 19 years and 6 months of age. This extension of child support order in such conditions is binding to the parties concerned even in the absence of entering into such an agreement, up to the time the child reaches an age of 19 years and 6 months.

Child Custody in Michigan

In Michigan, custody determinations are made by the court based on the best interests of the child. If parents are unable to come to a custody-sharing agreement, a court may make a determination. Factors that courts consider in custody determinations include:

  • • Love, affection and emotional bonds involved between the parties and the child
  • • Capacity and capability of the parent to raise the child with love, affection and guidance and to have the capacity to support the child’s education and to raise the child in his or her religion or creed
  • • Economic capacity to meet the essential requirements of the child such as food, clothing, medical care and other miscellaneous needs
  • • Duration of time the child lived in a stable and conducive environment and the desirability of its continuity in providing the environment
  • • Permanence, as a family unit, of the existing or proposed custodial home or homes.
  • • Moral fitness, mental and physical fitness of the parties involved
  • • Home, school, and community record of the child
  • • Child's preference shall be taken into account if the court finds the child to be of an age in which he or she is able to take reasonable decision.
  • • Willingness and ability of each of the parties to assist and encourage a close and continuing parent-child relationship
  • • Domestic violence
  • • Any other relevant factor considered by the court
Child Visitation in Michigan

Michigan law presumes that a child’s best interests are generally served by having strong relationships with both parents. Thus, under Michigan law, a non-custodial parent is generally awarded visitation (also called “parenting time” in Michigan) unless a court determines by clear and convincing evidence that parenting time would endanger a child’s physical, mental or emotional health. (see Michigan Compiled Laws 722.27a).

It is important to remember that parenting time is granted in accordance with the best interests of the child.

In order to determine the length, frequency, and type of parenting time, Michigan courts consider several factors (see MCL 722.27a):

  • 1. The existence of any special circumstances or needs of the child.
  • 2. Whether the child is a nursing child less than 6 months of age, or less than 1 year of age if the child receives substantial nutrition through nursing.
  • 3. The reasonable likelihood of abuse or neglect of the child during parenting time.
  • 4. The reasonable likelihood of abuse of a parent resulting from the exercise of parenting time.
  • 5. The inconvenience to, and burdensome impact or effect on, the child of traveling to and from the parenting time.
  • 6. Whether a parent can reasonably be expected to exercise parenting time in accordance with the court order.
  • 7. Whether the parent has frequently failed to exercise reasonable parenting time.
  • 8. The threatened or actual detention of the child with the intent to retain or conceal the child from the other parent or from a third person who has legal custody. A custodial parent’s temporary residence with the child in a domestic violence shelter shall not be construed as evidence of the custodial parent’s intent to retain or conceal the child from the other parent.
  • 9. Any other relevant factors.

Finding your Michigan Family Lawyer

CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com provides the best way to find Michigan child custody lawyers, child support lawyers, and child visitation lawyers and attorneys, along with Michigan 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 Michigan?
  • • 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 Michigan 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 Michigan
  • (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 approximately 32,000 lawyers who are resident, active attorneys in Michigan. In order to check out the licensure for any Michigan lawyer, visit http://www.michbar.org/memberdirectory. In order to check out the disciplinary history for any Michigan lawyer, visit http://www.adbmich.org/CHECKER.HTM.

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

Our Michigan family lawyers cover the entire state of Michigan and include lawyers located in Oakland County, Wayne County, Kent County, Detroit, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Sterling Heights, Ann Arbor, Flint, Dearborn, Kalamazoo, Livonia, Warren, Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Troy, Southfield, Rochester, Royal Oak, Grosse Pointe, Genesee County Macomb County, Washtenaw County, Ingham County, and Livingston County.
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