Detailed description
Parents are obliged to support their children. If a separated parent looks after a minor child, they generally fulfill their maintenance obligation by raising and caring for the child. The other parent owes cash maintenance.
If no out-of-court agreement is reached and the simplified procedure for determining maintenance has also failed, the court will, upon application, determine maintenance for the child in a trial.
Since the new maintenance law was introduced, uniform minimum maintenance amounts apply to children in all federal states, staggered according to three age groups. The minimum maintenance is now based on the so-called material subsistence level, which corresponds to twice the tax allowance for children.
The child's actual entitlement to maintenance can only be determined on a case-by-case basis. The amount ultimately to be paid does not depend solely on the income of the person liable for maintenance. As a guide, the higher regional courts provide current maintenance guidelines, which also contain a maintenance table ("Düsseldorf Table").
In principle, adult children are only entitled to maintenance if they are in training or are not fully available to the labour market due to illness, i.e. cannot support themselves.
If no or no regular maintenance is available from the person obliged to pay maintenance, children of single parents up to the age of 18 can receive maintenance from the maintenance advance fund. One of the requirements for this is that the children over the age of 12 are not dependent on SGB II benefits or that their single parent earns at least 600 euros while receiving SGB II benefits.