Paternity means fatherhood. So establishing paternity means reaching a legal decision about (or establishing) who the father of the child is.
If a couple has a child while married, the law treats the husband as the father of the child. In this case, paternity does not need to be established. (But if they wait to get married until after the child is born, they do need to establish paternity.)
Similarly, both parents signing an Acknowledgment of Paternity (AOP) form under oath establishes paternity for that child. This is most often done in the hospital when the child is born. Among other benefits for the child, signing an AOP ensures that the child's original birth certificate includes the father's name.
If you and your child's other parent did not sign an AOP form or your child was not born during marriage, you need to establish paternity for your child.
If you want custody or visitation rights for your child, you need for the law to recognize you as one of the child's legal parents. For fathers, that is done by establishing paternity.
If you want to receive or provide child support or medical support, you will need to establish paternity.
After paternity is established, the father's name can be put on the child's birth certificate.
Establishing paternity also gives the father certain legal rights and responsibilities related to the child.
It allows fathers to seek custody or visitation for their children through the courts.
It also makes the father responsible to provide financial and medical support to the child, just as the law requires mother to do.
DNA testing is done in Laboratory Corporation of America (LabCorp) offices across the state.
Medical testing professionals take the DNA samples by gently swabbing the inside of each participant's mouth. The samples are then processed and tested.
DCSE's DNA testing costs less than $38 for each person tested, so testing for three participants (mother, father, and child) should cost less than $115.
Who pays is decided in part by the results. If DCSE arranges the tests and those tests find that the man who is tested is the father, he will be required to pay for the test. If the tests show that this man was not the father and there is an open case with DCSE, DCSE normally pays for the tests.
If a court orders testing, the court decides who will pay.
Genetic testing not arranged by DCSE or a court is generally paid by the people involved.
Establishing paternity can benefit children in the short and long term.
Establishing paternity can allow your child to claim certain kinds of Social Security, disability, or veterans benefits if the father dies or becomes disabled. It also grants rights to inheritance from the father.
Establishing paternity gives children a chance to know the medical history of both sides of their families.
Establishing paternity has other benefits as well.
VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT
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