South Carolina Statutes

§ 63-17-325 — Child support obligations start at date of conception.

South Carolina § 63-17-325
JurisdictionSouth Carolina
Title 63SOUTH CAROLINA CHILDREN'S CODE
Ch. 17PATERNITY AND CHILD SUPPORT

This text of South Carolina § 63-17-325 (Child support obligations start at date of conception.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.C. Code Ann. § 63-17-325 (2026).

Text

(A)A biological father of a child has a duty to pay the mother of the child the following financial obligations beginning with the date of conception:
(1)child support payment obligations in an amount determined pursuant to Section 63-17-470;
(2)fifty percent of the mother's pregnancy expenses.
(a)Any portion of a mother's pregnancy expenses paid by the mother or the biological father reduces that parent's fifty percent obligation regardless of when the mother or biological father pays the pregnancy expenses.
(b)Pregnancy expenses must include fifty percent of the mother's insurance premiums that are not paid by her employer or governmental program beginning from the date of conception and before the pregnancy ends, unless otherwise ordered by the court.
(c)Item (2) does not apply if

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Legislative History

HISTORY: 2023 Act No. 70 (S.474), SECTION 4, eff May 25, 2023. Editor's Note 2023 Act No. 70, SECTIONS 11 and 12, provide as follows: "SECTION 11. The Public Employee Benefit Authority and the State Health Plan shall cover prescribed contraceptives for dependents under the same terms and conditions that the Plan provides contraceptive coverage for employees and spouses. The State Health Plan shall not apply patient cost sharing provisions to covered contraceptives. "SECTION 12. The President of the Senate, on behalf of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, on behalf of the House of Representatives have an unconditional right to intervene on behalf of their respective bodies in a state court action and may provide evidence or argument, written or oral, if a party to that court action challenges the constitutionality of this act. In a federal court action that challenges the constitutionality of this act the Legislature may seek to intervene, to file an amicus brief, or to present arguments in accordance with federal rules of procedure. Intervention by the Legislature pursuant to this provision does not limit the duty of the Attorney General to appear and prosecute legal actions or defend state agencies, officers or employees as otherwise provided. In any action in which the Legislature intervenes or participates, the Senate and the House of Representatives shall function independently from each other in the representation of their respective clients."

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Bluebook (online)
South Carolina § 63-17-325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/sc/17/63-17-325.