Husband is presumed to be the child's father
Birth certificate is evidence of paternity
Applying to a Court to establish paternity
Court can recommend tests to establish paternity
Is the father automatically a guardian of a child?
Can a mother get financial support for the costs of her baby's birth?
Applying for the Domestic Purposes Benefit (DPB)
Does an applicant for the DPB have to name the other parent?
Applying for child support while on the DPB
Need more information or advice?
Paternity is the legal word for fatherhood.
Establishing the paternity of a child, or who the legal father is, is very important, especially when, for example, -
There are a number of ways the paternity of a child can be established -
These different ways are explained in more detail below.
The law presumes that a man is the father of a child if -
For example, if a separated father applies to the Family Court for an order giving him a role in looking after a child, the Court will accept he is the child's father if he provides it with a copy of the marriage certificate that proves either of the above.
The child's mother, however, is entitled to try to prove he is not the father if she wants to - through DNA tests, for example.
If a child's parents weren't married, the child's birth certificate can be used to establish paternity. The man named as the child's father on the birth certificate is presumed to be the child's father. But this can be disputed in Court by someone else, or even by the child later in life, for example.
There are two ways by which a man can be named as a child's father on the birth certificate -
A man can state that he is the father of a child by signing a Deed of Acknowledgement of Paternity, which to have legal effect must be signed by the child's mother as well.
A deed is a special type of legal document that must be properly signed and witnessed. A family lawyer is able to prepare and witness a deed.
If there is a dispute about the paternity of a child, the Family Court can be asked to resolve it. A child's mother may ask the Court to make a paternity order against a man who denies he is the child's father. A man may also ask the Court to declare that he is a child's father, or, if he believes there has been a mistake, to declare that he is not.
In certain cases other people can ask the Court to decide a question of paternity.
The High Court also has powers to decide questions of paternity and to declare that a man is or is not a child's father.
When considering a dispute about paternity, the Court can recommend that tests be done to help it make a decision. These tests are called parentage tests, and might involve blood samples or mouth scrapings from both the child and the man.
The man can refuse to have the tests, but the Court can take his refusal into account when considering all the evidence.
Both the mother and the man have a right to ask the Court to recommend that these tests be done.
Usually, a child's mother and father are joint guardians of the child. They are often referred to as the child's natural guardians.
However, while a child's mother is automatically a guardian, the child's father is a guardian only if -
The father can also apply to be appointed a guardian by the Family Court. The Court will do this unless it is against the child's best interests.
For more information, see Guardianship.
Yes. Within one year of a child's birth, the child's mother can apply to the Family Court for an order that the father contribute towards the costs related to the birth, and towards the mother's living expenses during the pregnancy and for one month after it.
A parent caring for dependent children is entitled to receive the DPB from the Government if the parent -
Applications for the DPB must be made to Work and Income and must include -
Work and Income may require an applicant for the DPB to name the other parent of a child, because that other parent has an obligation to contribute to the cost of supporting the child (this is called paying child support). If an applicant for the DPB refuses to tell Work and Income who the other parent is, the amount of benefit paid can be reduced.
However, the benefit won't be reduced if Work and Income is satisfied that -
Work and Income may want signed statements and letters from lawyers to help prove any of these things.
For more information about the DPB, contact Work and Income or visit their website at www.workandincome.govt.nz.
The parent who has day-to-day care of a child is entitled to get a contribution towards the cost of that care from the other parent. That contribution is known as child support. Applications for child support are made to the Child Support section of the Inland Revenue Department.
An application for child support must include proof that the other person is in fact a parent of the child. The proof can include -
How much the other parent has to pay towards child support depends on how much they earn and their personal situation. They pay child support directly to the Inland Revenue Department, not to the parent with day-to-day care.
For more information about child support, contact the Inland Revenue Department or visit their website at www.ird.govt.nz/childsupport.
Anyone applying for the DPB will automatically be required to apply for child support at the same time. Any child support owed to someone while they are receiving the DPB must be paid to the Government as a contribution towards the cost of the DPB. If the child support is more than the DPB, the difference will be paid directly to the person entitled to receive it.
For more information or advice, click on the links below to other pages or pamphlets on this site, or contact a family lawyer (www.familylaw.org.nz), a community law centre, or the nearest Family Court office.
Anyone who needs a lawyer but can't afford one may be able to get legal aid. This is where the Government pays some or all of the lawyer's bills (sometimes you may have to pay some or all of it back).
You can get information on legal aid by -
Legal aid is available for all Family Court cases, except dissolution of marriage (divorce).
Pamphlet: Paternity (PDF 413Kb)
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