Yes. Failure to give child support can lead to a criminal case under Republic Act No. 9262, the Anti-Violence Against Women and Their Children Act of 2004. However, nonpayment does not automatically amount to violence against women and their children, commonly called a VAWC offense.
The crucial questions are whether support was legally due, whether the father or partner was capable of providing it, and whether he deliberately withheld or reduced support to control the woman or cause her or the child mental or emotional suffering. A genuine inability to pay is legally different from a willful refusal to support a child despite having the means.
When Nonpayment of Child Support Becomes a VAWC Offense
The Anti-VAWC Act of 2004 protects a woman and her children from abuse committed by:
- Her husband or former husband;
- A man with whom she has or previously had a dating or sexual relationship; or
- A man with whom she has a common child.
Marriage is not required. A father may therefore face a VAWC complaint involving an illegitimate child, provided his paternity and the other elements of the offense can be established. The child may be living inside or outside the family home. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Financial support cases are commonly evaluated under two separate provisions of RA 9262.
Economic abuse under Section 5(e)(2)
Section 5(e)(2) covers deprivation, threatened deprivation, or deliberately insufficient provision of financial support legally due to the woman or her children.
This provision must be read together with the opening language of Section 5(e). The deprivation must be used to compel, control, or restrict the woman or her child.
Examples may include:
- “I will support the child only if you return to me.”
- “Drop the case or I will stop paying tuition.”
- “Give me custody, or I will not send money.”
- Deliberately providing a plainly inadequate amount despite sufficient income to force the mother to obey particular demands.
- Selling or hiding property that had been committed or ordered to answer for unpaid child support.
In Melgar v. People, the Supreme Court upheld a conviction where the father deliberately failed to support his child and sold property that was supposed to answer for years of support arrears. The Court treated the conduct as economic abuse under Section 5(e). (Supreme Court E-Library)
The later en banc ruling in Acharon v. People clarified that deprivation under Section 5(e) must involve the purpose or effect of controlling or restricting the woman’s conduct. Mere financial difficulty or simple nonpayment, without the required abusive purpose or effect, is not automatically a crime. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Psychological violence under Section 5(i)
Section 5(i) covers acts that cause mental or emotional anguish, public ridicule, or humiliation, including the denial of financial support.
For a conviction based specifically on denial of support, the prosecution must prove more than the fact that no money was received. It must show that:
- Financial support was legally due;
- The accused willfully or consciously denied that support;
- He did so to cause the woman or child mental or emotional anguish, ridicule, or humiliation; and
- The denial caused or was likely to cause the required psychological harm.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that mere failure or inability to provide support is insufficient under Section 5(i), even when the absence of money causes hardship. The prosecution must prove deliberate denial and the required criminal intent. (Supreme Court E-Library)
What Counts as Legally Required Child Support?
Articles 194 and 195 of the Family Code of the Philippines require parents to support their children, whether legitimate or illegitimate.
Support is not limited to food or a monthly cash allowance. It includes what is reasonably necessary for:
- Food and daily sustenance;
- Housing;
- Clothing;
- Medical and dental care;
- Education or vocational training; and
- Transportation to school or work.
Education may remain part of support even after the child turns 18, particularly when the child is still studying or training for a profession or trade. However, RA 9262 generally defines “children” as persons below 18, as well as older persons who are incapable of taking care of themselves. A claim involving an adult child who is still studying may therefore be enforceable as a civil support obligation even when the appropriate VAWC theory is less straightforward. (Lawphil)
There is no fixed percentage for child support
Philippine law does not prescribe a universal percentage of the father’s salary.
Under Articles 201 and 202 of the Family Code, the amount must be proportionate to:
- The child’s actual and reasonable needs; and
- The resources or financial capacity of the parent required to pay.
A court may increase or decrease support when the child’s needs or the parent’s financial circumstances materially change. A ₱5,000 monthly contribution could be reasonable in one family and plainly inadequate in another.
Relevant expenses commonly include tuition, school supplies, rent, utilities attributable to the child, food, medicines, therapy, childcare, transportation, and health insurance. Luxury expenses are not automatically chargeable, but the child’s accustomed standard of living and the family’s financial capacity may be considered.
Both parents have responsibilities
Both parents are generally expected to contribute according to their resources. The fact that the mother works does not extinguish the father’s duty to support the child. At the same time, the father’s actual financial ability remains relevant when the amount is determined.
Unemployment is not automatically a defense. Courts and prosecutors may examine whether the respondent:
- Truly lost his income;
- Is deliberately unemployed or underemployed;
- Has businesses, property, vehicles, savings, or other resources;
- Supports another household while refusing to support the child;
- Conceals earnings or receives income informally; or
- Maintains a lifestyle inconsistent with his claimed poverty.
Does the Mother Need to Demand Support First?
A written demand is highly advisable.
Article 203 of the Family Code provides that support is demandable from the time it is needed, but it is generally payable from the date of a judicial or extrajudicial demand. An extrajudicial demand is a demand made outside court, such as a letter, email, text message, or formally served notice. (Lawphil)
A demand can establish:
- The amount requested;
- The expenses that were explained to the parent;
- The date he was informed of the child’s needs;
- His ability or refusal to respond;
- Any conditions or threats attached to payment; and
- The starting point for support arrears in a civil claim.
A formal demand is not necessarily indispensable in every criminal prosecution when the circumstances otherwise establish deliberate denial. Still, a clear written demand often eliminates arguments that the parent did not know what was needed or where payment should be sent.
The demand should be reasonable and supported by a basic expense breakdown. Keep proof that it was received, such as a courier receipt, email delivery record, message acknowledgment, or screenshot showing the complete conversation.
Genuine Inability to Pay Versus Deliberate Refusal
The distinction between inability and refusal often determines whether the dispute is primarily civil or potentially criminal.
| Situation | Likely legal significance |
|---|---|
| The father recently lost his job, provides proof, communicates with the mother, and sends what he reasonably can | May show inability rather than criminal denial |
| He stops paying after the mother refuses to resume the relationship | May indicate economic control under Section 5(e) |
| He earns regularly but transfers property or conceals income to avoid support | May support an inference of deliberate deprivation |
| He sends irregular but substantial payments consistent with his limited means | Weakens a claim of complete willful denial |
| He pays only after a prosecutor’s complaint is filed | Payment may reduce arrears but does not necessarily erase earlier conduct |
| He tells the mother that the child will receive nothing unless she withdraws a case | Strong evidence of coercion or control |
| He refuses support because the mother will not allow informal visitation | Visitation and support are separate legal issues; one should not be used as leverage for the other |
In Acharon, the accused had initially sent financial support but later suffered a fire and a serious vehicular accident while abroad. The Supreme Court found that the prosecution failed to prove a willful denial intended to inflict psychological harm. His inability to continue paying was not treated as criminal denial. (Supreme Court E-Library)
How to File a VAWC Complaint for Failure to Give Child Support
A criminal complaint, a protection order, and a civil action for support are different remedies. Depending on the facts, they may be pursued separately or at the same time.
1. Organize proof of the relationship and the child’s filiation
Prepare documents showing that the respondent is legally obliged to support the child:
- PSA birth certificate;
- PSA marriage certificate, if applicable;
- Birth certificate signed or acknowledged by the father;
- Affidavit of Admission of Paternity or acknowledgment documents;
- Previous written admissions of paternity;
- Prior support payments or remittance records;
- Court judgment or agreement recognizing paternity; and
- DNA or other filiation evidence when paternity is disputed.
An illegitimate child has a right to support, but filiation—the legally recognized parent-child relationship—must be proved. Under Articles 172 and 175 of the Family Code, illegitimate filiation may be established through the same forms of evidence used to establish legitimate filiation, subject to applicable rules and deadlines. (Lawphil)
2. Prepare an itemized record of the child’s needs
Create a monthly expense sheet covering:
- Food;
- Rent or housing;
- Utilities;
- Tuition and school expenses;
- Transportation;
- Medical and dental expenses;
- Medicines;
- Childcare; and
- Other recurring necessities.
Attach receipts, statements of account, enrollment records, prescriptions, medical certificates, and proof of payment whenever available.
Avoid simply stating that “everything is expensive.” A detailed and reasonable computation is more useful to the prosecutor or court.
3. Collect evidence of the respondent’s means and deliberate refusal
Useful evidence may include:
- Employment information;
- Payslips or employment contracts already in your possession;
- Remittance records;
- Business registrations or advertisements;
- Public social-media posts showing employment, travel, purchases, or business activities;
- Property, vehicle, or rental information;
- Messages acknowledging the obligation;
- Threats or conditions connected to payment;
- Proof that he supports another household while refusing the child; and
- Records of repeated demands and responses.
Do not illegally access private accounts, devices, or banking records. Records unavailable to the complainant may later be requested through lawful court or prosecutorial processes.
4. Report the matter to the proper office
A complainant may approach:
- The PNP Women and Children Protection Desk;
- The barangay VAW desk;
- The city or municipal social welfare office;
- The National Bureau of Investigation;
- The Office of the City or Provincial Prosecutor; or
- The Public Attorney’s Office for available assistance.
The police or social worker may help prepare the sworn statement and gather supporting documents. A criminal complaint is ordinarily evaluated through preliminary investigation by the prosecutor before an Information is filed in the Family Court.
The Department of Justice’s requirements for filing a complaint for preliminary investigation include an investigation data form, a complaint-affidavit or sworn statement, affidavits of witnesses, and supporting evidence. Local offices may require multiple copies and additional identification or documentary forms. (Department of Justice)
5. Execute a detailed complaint-affidavit
The affidavit should explain chronologically:
- The relationship between the parties;
- The child’s identity and filiation;
- The respondent’s work, business, or known financial resources;
- The child’s needs;
- The support previously provided;
- When and why support stopped or became insufficient;
- Each demand made;
- The respondent’s statements, threats, or conditions;
- How the denial was used to control or pressure the complainant; and
- The mental or emotional effect on the woman or child, if Section 5(i) is alleged.
Do not exaggerate or omit payments that were actually received. Incomplete or misleading financial histories can damage credibility.
6. Participate in the preliminary investigation
The prosecutor will give the respondent an opportunity to submit a counter-affidavit and supporting evidence. The prosecutor then determines whether there is probable cause to file a criminal case.
A complaint may be dismissed when the evidence shows only:
- A disagreement over the amount of support;
- Temporary inability to pay;
- Uncertain or disputed paternity;
- No proof of coercive control under Section 5(e); or
- No proof of deliberate denial intended to cause anguish under Section 5(i).
A dismissal of the criminal complaint does not automatically extinguish the child’s civil right to support.
Getting a Court Order for Immediate Support
A criminal complaint may take time. A woman who needs immediate support should also consider a petition for a Temporary Protection Order or Permanent Protection Order, or an appropriate family-court action for support.
Under Section 8 of RA 9262, a court may order the respondent to provide support and may direct his employer to withhold an appropriate portion of his salary and remit it directly to the woman. Unjustified failure by the respondent or employer to withhold or remit court-ordered support may result in indirect contempt. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Barangay, temporary, and permanent protection orders
| Remedy | What it can do | Statutory timing |
|---|---|---|
| Barangay Protection Order | Orders the respondent to stop acts under Sections 5(a) and 5(b), primarily threats or physical violence; it does not ordinarily fix child support | Issued on the filing date after an ex parte assessment; effective for 15 days |
| Temporary Protection Order | May include support, custody, stay-away directions, communication restrictions, residence exclusion, and other protective relief | Issued by the court on the filing date if justified; effective for 30 days and may be renewed |
| Permanent Protection Order | May provide continuing support and broader protection after notice and hearing | Effective until revoked by the court |
A petition for a TPO or PPO may be filed in the trial court with territorial jurisdiction over the petitioner’s residence. When a Family Court exists there, the petition should be filed in that court. The written application must be signed and verified under oath. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Barangay conciliation is not a mandatory condition before seeking relief under RA 9262. Section 33 prohibits barangay officials and courts from forcing an applicant to compromise or abandon the relief requested. A barangay certificate to file action should not be treated as a prerequisite to a VAWC protection proceeding. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Indigent applicants, or those facing an immediate danger or urgent need, may seek exemption from protection-order filing fees. RA 9262 also directs the court to refer qualified applicants to the Public Attorney’s Office. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Evidence of Mental or Emotional Anguish
For a charge under Section 5(i), the woman’s or child’s testimony about the mental or emotional impact is important because anguish is personal to the person who experienced it.
Helpful supporting evidence may include:
- Counseling or psychological records;
- Medical certificates;
- Prescriptions for anxiety, depression, or stress-related conditions;
- Messages describing distress;
- Testimony from relatives, teachers, or co-workers;
- Evidence that the child stopped attending school or treatment;
- Records of eviction, unpaid tuition, or interruption of medical care; and
- Proof that the respondent deliberately exploited these consequences.
A psychological report can strengthen the case, but the central issue remains whether the prosecution can prove the required elements beyond reasonable doubt. A diagnosis by itself does not establish that the respondent deliberately caused the condition through willful denial of support.
Common Problems That Weaken Child-Support VAWC Cases
Treating every unpaid month as an automatic crime
RA 9262 is not a substitute for every collection dispute. The evidence must show the required abusive conduct and criminal intent.
Demanding an amount without explaining how it was calculated
A support request should reflect the child’s needs and the parents’ resources. Unsupported or plainly excessive demands can distract from legitimate expenses.
Filing under the wrong theory
Section 5(e) focuses on deprivation used to compel, control, or restrict. Section 5(i) focuses on deliberate denial used to cause mental or emotional anguish, ridicule, or humiliation. The complaint-affidavit should clearly describe the facts instead of merely repeating statutory terms.
Using child support as a bargaining tool for custody or visitation
A father cannot ordinarily refuse support merely because visitation is disputed. Similarly, a mother should not assume that nonpayment automatically ends the father’s parental or visitation rights. Support, custody, and visitation are related but legally distinct issues.
Depending only on screenshots with no context
Preserve the full conversation, dates, account details, and identifying information. Cropped screenshots may be challenged as incomplete or misleading.
Signing a vague settlement
Any support agreement should identify:
- The monthly amount;
- Due date;
- Payment method;
- Allocation of tuition and medical expenses;
- Treatment of arrears;
- Adjustment procedure;
- Consequences of default; and
- Whether the agreement will be submitted for court approval.
Because VAWC is a public offense, an affidavit of desistance does not automatically end a criminal prosecution. The prosecutor or court determines the legal effect of a settlement or withdrawal. (Supreme Court E-Library)
What Happens If the Father Is Abroad or Is a Foreigner?
A woman does not have to be a Filipino citizen to seek protection under RA 9262. The relevant considerations are the qualifying relationship, the acts committed, and Philippine jurisdiction.
When the respondent is an OFW or foreign national:
- Preserve overseas employment contracts, remittance records, agency details, and known foreign addresses.
- If the respondent has a Philippine employer, manning agency, property, bank account, or other local assets, these may make enforcement more practical.
- A criminal complaint may still be initiated in the Philippines when the offense or an essential element occurred here, but service, arrest, and enforcement may be delayed while the respondent remains overseas.
- A Philippine hold-departure order prevents departure from the Philippines; it does not compel a person already abroad to return.
- Enforcing a Philippine support order against income or assets located abroad may require separate proceedings in the foreign country.
- Foreign birth, marriage, employment, or paternity documents may need an apostille from the competent authority in the country of origin, or consular authentication when the apostille system does not apply.
- Documents not in English or Filipino may require a properly certified translation.
Cross-border cases commonly take longer because of overseas service, authentication of documents, difficulty obtaining income information, and the need to coordinate with foreign counsel or authorities.
Possible Penalties
A violation of Section 5(e) is punishable by prision correccional, generally six months and one day to six years.
A violation of Section 5(i) is punishable by prision mayor, generally six years and one day to twelve years.
RA 9262 also provides for:
- A fine of ₱100,000 to ₱300,000; and
- Mandatory psychological counseling or psychiatric treatment.
The final sentence depends on the precise charge, circumstances, applicable periods of the penalty, and the Indeterminate Sentence Law. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I file a VAWC case if the father gives nothing at all?
Yes, but complete nonpayment alone does not guarantee a criminal case. You must still prove that support was legally due and that the nonpayment involved the intent or controlling conduct required by Section 5(e) or Section 5(i).
Can I file even if we were never married?
Yes. RA 9262 applies when the parties have or had a dating or sexual relationship or have a common child. An illegitimate child is legally entitled to support once filiation is established.
Can I file if the father gives money, but it is not enough?
Possibly. Deliberately insufficient support is mentioned in Section 5(e)(2). The amount must be assessed against the child’s reasonable needs and the father’s actual financial capacity. A small amount is not automatically criminal if it is genuinely all he can afford.
Does the child need to use the father’s surname?
No. The right to support comes from filiation, not merely from the surname used by the child. Paternity may be shown through acknowledgment, civil-registry documents, admissions, or other legally acceptable evidence.
Is a barangay confrontation required before filing?
No. Barangay conciliation is not a prerequisite to seeking protection under RA 9262, and officials may not force the woman to settle or abandon her requested remedies.
Can the court deduct support directly from the father’s salary?
Yes. A court protection order may direct the employer to withhold an appropriate percentage of the respondent’s salary and remit it directly to the woman or child.
Can the father refuse support because the mother denies visitation?
Ordinarily, no. Support should not be withheld as leverage in a custody or visitation dispute. The father may pursue appropriate custody or visitation relief separately.
Will payment after the complaint automatically dismiss the case?
No. Later payment may be considered, but it does not automatically erase earlier criminal conduct. The prosecutor or court will examine the entire history, including the reason payment was withheld and whether the legal elements had already been completed.
Can I recover support for previous years?
Article 203 makes the date of judicial or extrajudicial demand important in claiming unpaid support. Recovery of older amounts depends on the evidence, prior demands, agreements, court orders, and applicable prescription rules.
What if the father truly has no job?
A genuine inability to pay may prevent criminal liability for willful denial, particularly when the father communicates honestly, provides proof, and contributes according to his means. However, voluntary unemployment, concealed income, or maintaining another household while refusing support may lead to a different conclusion.
Key Takeaways
- Failure to give child support can result in a VAWC case, but nonpayment is not automatically criminal.
- Section 5(e) generally requires deprivation used to control, compel, or restrict the woman or child.
- Section 5(i) requires willful denial intended to cause mental or emotional anguish, ridicule, or humiliation.
- Legitimate and illegitimate children are entitled to support once filiation is established.
- Support includes food, housing, clothing, medical care, education, and transportation—not merely a cash allowance.
- Philippine law has no fixed percentage for child support; the amount depends on the child’s needs and the parent’s resources.
- A written demand, detailed expense records, proof of income, and complete communications can be decisive.
- A court protection order may provide immediate support and direct salary withholding even while other proceedings are pending.
- Barangay mediation is not a required first step, and a Barangay Protection Order does not ordinarily determine child support.
- Even when a criminal complaint fails, the child’s civil right to financial support may remain enforceable.