Establish or challenge parentage, update vital records, and set clear orders for custody and support. We help parents in Guilford County District Court with DNA testing, acknowledgments, and court orders that schools, doctors, and employers can follow. If you’re searching for a Greensboro Paternity Lawyer or a Greensboro Parentage Lawyer, this page covers both paths.
Krispen Culbertson, Greensboro paternity and parentage lawyer, practicing in Guilford County District Court for 20+ years. Focus on acknowledgments of paternity, genetic testing orders, parentage adjudications, custody and child support, birth-certificate updates, and interstate UIFSA/UCCJEA.
Memberships: North Carolina State Bar; local family law section. Courts: Greensboro and High Point District Court calendars.
Begin a paternity case
DNA testing with chain of custody
Rescind or set aside an acknowledgment
Add a father to the birth certificate
Unmarried parents: custody and parenting time
Support order, medical coverage, and arrears
Quick links: Greensboro Family Lawyer • Greensboro Child Custody Lawyer • Greensboro Child Support Lawyer • Greensboro Modification and Enforcement • Greensboro UIFSA and UCCJEA • Greensboro Appeals and Post-Judgment
Ways to establish parentage: signed Acknowledgment of Paternity (AOP), court-ordered genetic testing with proper chain of custody, or a court order after a hearing.
Can you rescind an acknowledgment: there is a short rescission window; later challenges require grounds such as fraud or mistake.
Will the court require DNA testing: the judge can order testing and set strict collection rules.
Does parentage affect custody and support: yes. Once parentage is set, the court can enter orders for legal custody, parenting time, child support, and medical support.
Do you need to register an order from another state: yes for enforcement or changes; see Greensboro UIFSA and UCCJEA.
Acknowledgment of Paternity (AOP). A notarized acknowledgment creates a legal parent-child relationship for support and can support custody terms. It can be signed at the hospital or later through Vital Records or North Carolina Child Support Services.
Genetic testing. The court can order DNA testing. Results must come from a lab that follows chain-of-custody standards. Collection sites check ID, photograph the parties, and track samples from swab to report.
Court order. When parentage is disputed, the court can adjudicate parentage after service and a hearing. The order supports birth certificate changes and allows custody and support to be set.
Presumptions that may apply. Marriage to the mother at birth or during the conception window may create a presumption. If there is a dispute, the court decides based on testing and evidence.
Chain of custody. Approved collection sites check photo ID, document the process, and ship sealed kits to an accredited lab. This helps the judge rely on the result.
Who gets tested. Child, mother, and the alleged father. In some cases, close relatives may be tested when a party is unavailable.
Refusal to test. The court can draw inferences from a refusal and may still order testing.
Out-of-state testing. Allowed if the lab and collection site meet chain-of-custody requirements.
Once parentage is set, the court can enter a parenting plan that covers:
Guilford County uses custody mediation before a trial in most cases. If one parent plans a move, the UCCJEA rules and your order’s travel terms control. Start with Greensboro Child Custody Lawyer.
Child support guidelines. Worksheets A, B, or C apply based on the schedule. We prepare accurate income numbers, health insurance credits, and child care costs.
Medical support. Orders often require coverage through an available plan and set rules for unreimbursed expenses.
Birth expenses and retroactive support. The court can address past costs and set arrears with a clear ledger.
Wage withholding. Starts after entry of a support order so payments are tracked correctly. See Greensboro Child Support Lawyer.
Legitimation and adjudication. When parents are not married, a court order or valid acknowledgment can establish full legal status.
Birth certificate updates. After a valid acknowledgment or court order, Vital Records can add or correct the father’s name.
Child’s name. A name change request can be handled within the case when supported by parentage findings.
Cross-links: UIFSA and UCCJEA • Military Divorce • 50B • 50C
Where cases are heard. Greensboro and High Point.
Steps we manage. Filing the complaint or motion, service of process, DNA orders, temporary terms when needed, custody mediation, and final orders that agencies can follow.
IV-D vs private filings. Child Support Services can file to set support. Private cases often combine parentage, custody, and support in one path to avoid duplicate hearings.
Intake and venue check
Filing and service
DNA collection and results window
Temporary parenting terms if needed
Final orders: parentage, custody, child support, medical support, and birth-certificate update language
Culbertson & Associates — Greensboro Paternity & Parentage Lawyer
315 Spring Garden St, Ste #300
Greensboro, NC 27401
(336) 272-4299 • culbertsonatlaw.com
Office hours: Mon–Fri 8:30 AM–5 PM • Area served: Greensboro, Winston-Salem, Asheboro, High Point, Burlington, Guilford County
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