Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Paternity Lawyers
Find experienced paternity attorneys serving Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and surrounding communities.
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Get Started NowBenefits of Hiring a Paternity Attorney
Family law decisions are permanent and deeply personal — custody arrangements, property division, and support obligations shape your life for years. Getting it right the first time matters.
Emotions run high in family cases. An attorney provides clear-headed legal strategy when you're not in a position to think objectively.
Courts have complex rules and deadlines that vary by state. Missing a filing deadline or failing to disclose assets properly can have serious consequences.
An attorney can identify hidden assets, evaluate the true value of marital property, and ensure you're not leaving money on the table during settlement
If your spouse has an attorney and you don't, you're at a significant disadvantage in negotiations. The power imbalance is real.
Common Questions About Paternity
General information only — not legal advice.
How is paternity established?
Three common ways: voluntary acknowledgment (both parents sign a legal document, often at the hospital), genetic testing (DNA tests are over 99% accurate), or court order. If paternity is disputed, either parent can petition the court to order DNA testing. Some states presume the husband is the father of children born during marriage, which can complicate matters.
What rights does an unmarried father have?
Once paternity is legally established, an unmarried father generally has the right to seek custody and visitation, must pay child support, and the child gains inheritance rights and access to the father's benefits (Social Security, health insurance, veterans' benefits). Without legal paternity, an unmarried father may have no enforceable rights.
Can I challenge paternity after signing an acknowledgment?
Most states allow a limited window (often 60 days to 2 years) to rescind a voluntary acknowledgment. After that window, challenging paternity becomes much harder — you'd typically need to prove fraud, duress, or material mistake of fact. Courts prioritize the child's best interests, which can mean maintaining an established parent-child relationship even when DNA says otherwise.
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