MI Child Support Unit Projected To Soon Reach $300M In Collection

Lansing, MI - Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has announced that the Department’s Child Support Unit is projected to hit a collection of $300 million in child support by March.

The collections of significant back child support have grown steadily since the inception of the Child Support Unit in 2003. Through prosecutions, the unit has collected the necessary financial support for 20,000 children their parents failed to provide. 

Attorney General Nessel took office in January 2019, and since then the unit has collected approximately $26 million in child support, which is an average of $2 million per month.

“Our office has an obligation to take action on behalf of Michigan’s children when one of their parents fails to meet their responsibilities,” Nessel said. “I am proud of our Child Support Unit and the work they do to ensure the kids we fight for are properly supported.”

Failing to pay child support is a felony in Michigan and these Criminal Failure-to-Pay Child Support cases are handled by the Attorney General’s Child Support Unit. Its goal is to ensure deadbeat parents financially support the families they’ve left behind and the department pursues parents across the nation to collect payments on Michigan-enforceable support orders. The Child Support Unit steps in on behalf of Michigan family when the noncustodial parents live outside the state or when cases are referred from the Friend of the Court. The largest single collection to date is $464,476, collected from a pediatric neurosurgeon in 2005.

Custodial parents who have experienced a history of non-payment and are owed significant back child support may file a complaint online with the Michigan Attorney General or call 517-335-7560.