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Can I Stop Paying Child Support if I Don’t Get to See My Kids?

Can I Stop Paying Child Support if I Don’t Get to See My Kids?
Dec2725
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No, you cannot legally stop paying child support even when your ex-spouse denies you court-ordered visitation or refuses to let you see your children. Texas law treats child support and visitation as separate legal obligations, meaning one parent’s violation of custody orders does not excuse the other parent from fulfilling financial responsibilities.

If you’ve missed child support payments or need to modify orders, contact Collin County Law Group for a consultation with our child support lawyers to determine your options.

When to Get a Family Law Attorney

Many situations require prompt legal intervention to protect your rights and prevent escalating consequences that jeopardize your financial stability and personal freedom. Our family law attorneys help you address problems before they spiral out of control:

  • You’re facing an enforcement hearing for unpaid support.
  • You’ve fallen behind on payments by more than several months.
  • You’ve received notices from the Office of the Attorney General.
  • You lost your job or experienced an income reduction requiring order modification.

Legal representation becomes necessary when the state threatens enforcement actions that could result in serious and lasting consequences. We step in immediately to negotiate payment plans, request modifications, or defend you against disproportionate penalties that don’t account for legitimate hardships you’ve experienced.

What Happens If I Stop Paying Child Support?

Withholding child support triggers serious legal and financial consequences that accumulate rapidly and become increasingly difficult to resolve over time. Courts view non-payment as contempt regardless of your reasons, even when your ex-spouse violates visitation orders simultaneously.

Accumulate Arrears

Unpaid child support accrues as arrears that continue to grow with interest, creating a debt that can follow you indefinitely under Texas Family Code § 157.263. Unlike other debts, child support arrears cannot be discharged through bankruptcy.

Consequences of Non-Payment

Texas strictly enforces child support through various measures to ensure payment and penalize noncompliance. These potential consequences demonstrate why withholding payments causes more trouble than it prevents:

  • Wage garnishment.
  • Liens on assets.
  • License suspension.
  • Passport denial.
  • Lottery winnings interception.
  • Tax refund interception.
  • Contempt of court.
  • Credit damage.

These enforcement mechanisms operate independently and often simultaneously, creating a cascade of consequences that make financial recovery extremely difficult. Rather than alleviating your frustration over denied visitation, stopping payments only multiplies your legal problems exponentially.

What to Do Instead of Stopping Payments

Continue making your court-ordered payments while pursuing legal remedies to enforce your visitation rights and address custody order violations. Taking proper legal action protects your interests without exposing you to contempt charges or enforcement actions.

Document Everything

Maintaining detailed records of visitation denials builds the evidence foundation needed to prove your ex-spouse’s interference with your parental rights. Thorough documentation transforms your word against theirs into verifiable proof courts cannot ignore:

  • Keep a calendar marking every denied or missed visit.
  • Save all text messages and emails discussing visitation.
  • Record dates, times, and circumstances of denied parenting time.
  • Note witnesses who observed the interference.
  • Preserve any communication showing parental alienation attempts.

Courts rely heavily on documentation when determining whether one parent systematically violated custody orders or whether isolated miscommunications occurred. Strong evidence demonstrates patterns of obstruction that justify court intervention.

File a Motion for Enforcement

Courts have broad authority to enforce visitation orders through remedies that punish violations and ensure future compliance. Judges take custody interference seriously and may impose consequences designed to protect children’s relationships with both parents:

  • Modify custody arrangements to grant you additional time.
  • Order a makeup visitation to make up for missed parenting time.
  • Require supervised exchanges to prevent future interference.
  • Hold your ex in contempt with fines or jail time.
  • Order payment of your attorney fees.

Successfully proving systematic visitation denial often results in significant custody modifications that increase your parenting time and reduce opportunities for future interference. Courts recognize that children benefit from meaningful relationships with both parents and act decisively when one parent sabotages those bonds. Working with a trusted family lawyer ensures your side of the case is clearly and effectively presented.

Modify the Child Support Order

If financial hardship prevents you from meeting your current obligation, petition the court for a modification based on changed circumstances, such as job loss, reduced income, and increased expenses. Texas law allows modifications when circumstances have materially and substantially changed since the original order. Still, you must continue paying the existing amount until the court officially reduces it.

Contact an Experienced Child Support Lawyer

Protecting both your visitation rights and defending against child support enforcement actions requires a knowledgeable child support attorney who understands Texas family law. Don’t let frustration over denied visitation push you into decisions that result in jail time, license suspensions, or insurmountable debt. Contact Collin County Law Group at (972) 548-7167 to schedule a consultation now.

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