When Child Support or Spousal Support Is Not Being Paid
Pennsylvania has aggressive, automatic enforcement mechanisms for unpaid support. The state treats support obligations seriously — failure to pay is contempt of court, and the consequences are real. Most enforcement actions do not require a separate attorney filing; the Domestic Relations Section and PASCDU have direct enforcement authority.
What Happens Without You Filing Anything
Wage Attachment
Once a support order is entered, wage attachment is automatic in virtually all cases. Support is deducted directly from the obligor's paycheck before it reaches them. When the obligor changes jobs, the new employer is notified and the attachment follows. The obligor cannot avoid wage attachment by changing employers.
Tax Refund Interception
Federal and state tax refunds owed to an obligor with unpaid support arrears are automatically intercepted and applied to the arrears balance. This happens through the PACSES system without a separate court filing.
Credit Reporting
Significant arrears are reported to credit bureaus, affecting the obligor's ability to obtain credit, housing, and employment.
Lottery Winnings and Other Windfalls
Pennsylvania intercepts lottery winnings and other state-administered windfalls to collect unpaid support.
Tools That Require Action to Initiate
License Suspension
When arrears reach a threshold, Pennsylvania can suspend the obligor's driver's license, professional licenses, and recreational licenses. License suspension is one of the most effective enforcement tools because it creates immediate, practical pressure — particularly for obligors who need a driver's license for work.
Passport Denial
Obligors with arrears above the federal threshold are denied U.S. passport applications and renewals. For people who travel internationally for work, this is a significant lever.
Contempt of Court
Filing a petition for contempt triggers a court hearing where the obligor must appear and explain the non-payment. If found in contempt, the court can impose fines, require immediate payment of arrears, enter a suspended jail sentence with compliance conditions, or impose actual incarceration. Contempt is the most direct enforcement mechanism and often produces compliance that other tools have not.
Asset Seizure
Court orders can require seizure of bank accounts, investment accounts, and other assets to satisfy support arrears. When an obligor has assets but is choosing not to pay, asset seizure is the appropriate remedy.
Enforcement through the Domestic Relations Section is available without an attorney for basic cases. When the obligor is self-employed, has irregular income, is hiding assets, or has moved out of state, enforcement becomes more complex and attorney involvement typically produces faster results.
When the Obligor Is in Another State
Pennsylvania participates in the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA), which allows support orders to be enforced across state lines. An obligor who moves to another state cannot escape a Pennsylvania support order. The obligee can register the Pennsylvania order in the new state and pursue enforcement there, or Pennsylvania can work directly with the other state's enforcement mechanisms.
Interstate cases take longer but enforcement is available. Consult with an attorney about the specific enforcement approach depending on which state the obligor is in.