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Use gross (pre-tax) annual incomes. Why there's no single formula →
Estimated spousal support
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Get a rough monthly support range and a likely duration from the two incomes and how long you were married. There's no national formula — this is a planning estimate, not a prediction of what a judge will order.
Use gross (pre-tax) annual incomes. Why there's no single formula →
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No formula captures these, but they're what actually drives an award. Tick what applies to you to see how strong the case for support may be. Nothing is saved or sent.
Weightings vary by state, and some states have no alimony formula at all. How alimony is calculated →
Spousal support exists to limit the unfair economic fallout of a divorce for the lower-earning spouse. Because needs and circumstances vary so much, most states hand the decision to a judge rather than a calculator. Still, several common guideline formulas circulate, and they share a logic: support rises with the gap between the two incomes and falls as the lower earner's own income grows.
This estimator offers two of those guideline approaches and shows a range around the result, because real awards cluster around — rather than exactly on — any formula. Duration is tied to the length of the marriage, reflecting the widespread practice of ordering support for a fraction of the years married, with long marriages trending toward longer or indefinite support.
Pair this with the asset division calculator to see the full financial picture, and read how alimony is calculated for the factors judges actually weigh.
There's no single national formula. Many states leave the amount to a judge who weighs the income gap, marriage length, earning capacity, and the marital standard of living. Some states or counties publish guideline formulas — a common one takes roughly 30–35% of the higher earner's income minus 20–25% of the lower earner's. This calculator uses that guideline approach to produce a range.
Duration usually scales with the marriage's length — a common rule of thumb is support lasting between a third and half of the years married, with long marriages (often 20+ years) sometimes leading to indefinite support. Rules vary by state, and remarriage or cohabitation can end support.
For divorces finalized in 2019 or later under U.S. federal law, alimony is not deductible by the payer and not taxable to the recipient. Older agreements may follow the prior rules, and state tax treatment can differ — confirm with a CPA.
It depends on the state. Many states are no-fault and don't factor misconduct into support; a handful allow fault like adultery to influence an award. This is one of the clearest reasons to check your state's specific rules with an attorney.