WASHINGTON. The U.S. State Department announced Thursday it will begin revoking U.S. passports starting Friday for thousands of parents who owe significant unpaid child support, initially targeting those with debts of $100,000 or more—about 2,700 passport holders—based on figures provided by the Department of Health and Human Services and statements relayed to the Associated Press. The program will soon be expanded to include parents owing more than $2,500 under a 1996 law, potentially affecting many more individuals as HHS collects state data; until this week, penalties applied only to passport renewals. The State Department said eligibility for a new passport will be restored only after outstanding child support is paid and HHS records no longer list the person as delinquent.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
If you're a parent owing significant child support, your passport could be at risk. This new rule targets those owing $100,000 or more, but will soon include debts over $2,500. Check your status today to avoid travel disruptions.
The U.S. is getting serious about child support debt, using passport revocation as a tool. The rule will impact thousands initially, but potentially many more as the threshold lowers. Worth forwarding if you know someone who might be affected.
Child support recipients and state child-support enforcement agencies are likely to recover more owed funds as passport revocations increase pressure on delinquent payers to settle debts and coordinate payments with state agencies and HHS.
Thousands of U.S. passport holders who are significantly delinquent on child support could lose travel privileges and face administrative barriers until debts are repaid and HHS records are updated.
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US revokes passports for delinquent child support debtors
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