Any blog about Texas “alimony” should first state that in Texas, courts do not order “alimony,” courts order “spousal-maintenance.” Alimony, or post-divorce spousal payments, must be agreed to by the parties while the court may order spousal-maintenance in some situations.
In the past, Texas required a spouse to either have been married for 10 years or have suffered domestic violence within the past two years to even be considered a candidate for spousal maintenance. Even then, maintenance was limited to three years and the lesser of $2,500.00 or 20% of the payor’s gross income.
The legislature recently changed this by re-writing maintenance section of the Texas Family Code. These changes take effect September 1, 2011, and hit three main areas, the 10-year bar language, the duration and the amount of maintenance.
10-Year Bar
The legislature saw fit to change the language in the 10-year requirement to state the court may order maintenance if a spouse is unable to provide for their minimum reasonable needs due to an incapacitating physical or mental disability or if the spouse is taking care of a child that requires substantial care and personal supervision due to a physical or mental disability and prevents the spouse from earning sufficient income to provide for their minimum reasonable needs. This is slightly different wording than used before and may possibly lead to a more lenient view of when spousal maintenance is appropriate.
Duration of Maintenance
- Maintenance can now be ordered for up to five years if the marriage lasted less than 10 years and the payee was the victim of domestic violence within the past two years, has an incapacitating physical or mental disability or if the spouse is taking care of a child that requires substantial care and personal supervision due to a physical or mental disability and prevents the spouse from earning sufficient income to provide for their minimum reasonable needs. The five-year maximum will also apply to a marriage that lasted more than 10 years but less than 20 years.
- If the marriage lasted between 20 – 30 years, the court can order maintenance up to 7 years.
- Finally, if the marriage lasted 30 years or more, the court can order up to 10 years of maintenance.
Amount of Maintenance
- The legislature also saw fit to change the maximum maintenance a court could order. Now the amount is the lesser of $5,000.00 or 20 % of the payor’s monthly income.