Alimony, Spousal Support & Spousal Maintenance in Texas: The Complete Guide
Whatever you call it — alimony, spousal support, or spousal maintenance — post-divorce financial support between spouses is one of the most misunderstood areas of Texas family law. Texas is one of the strictest states in the country for court-ordered support. But there is a second path almost nobody talks about: an uncontested divorce that gives both spouses far more flexibility than any judge could ever order. This guide covers both.
Alimony vs. Spousal Support vs. Spousal Maintenance — What’s the Difference?
In Texas, these three terms all refer to the same general concept — one spouse financially supporting the other after divorce — but they have very different legal meanings:
- Alimony — not a legal term in Texas. It is the popular name people use, borrowed from other states. You will not find it in the Texas Family Code.
- Spousal maintenance — the official Texas legal term for court-ordered post-divorce support. Governed by Texas Family Code Chapter 8. Subject to strict eligibility requirements, dollar caps, and duration limits.
- Contractual alimony — spousal support agreed to by both spouses as part of a divorce settlement. Not subject to the statutory caps or duration limits. Treated as a binding contract by Texas courts.
- Temporary spousal support — support ordered during the divorce proceedings, before the divorce is finalized. Designed to maintain financial status quo while the case is pending.
This distinction matters enormously. Most people searching for “alimony in Texas” are trying to understand whether a court will order their spouse to pay them. The honest answer is: courts almost never do, unless you meet strict requirements. But an agreed spousal support arrangement through an uncontested divorce is available to virtually anyone — and is far more powerful.
Texas Is One of the Strictest States for Court-Ordered Alimony
Texas courts can order spousal maintenance — but the bar is high, the amounts are limited, and the duration is capped. Here is exactly what the law requires.
Step 1 — You must prove financial need
The spouse seeking maintenance must prove they lack sufficient property — including their share of the marital estate — to provide for their minimum reasonable needs after the divorce. This is not about maintaining your lifestyle. Texas courts define minimum reasonable needs as basic expenses: housing, food, transportation, and healthcare.
Step 2 — You must meet at least one qualifying condition
- 10+ year marriage — the marriage lasted at least 10 years AND the dependent spouse lacks the ability to earn enough to meet minimum needs, with a diligent effort to find employment
- Disability — the dependent spouse has a physical or mental disability that prevents self-support
- Caring for a disabled child — the dependent spouse must care for a child of the marriage who requires substantial care due to physical or mental disability
- Family violence — the paying spouse was convicted of or received deferred adjudication for a family violence offense within 2 years before filing or while the divorce was pending
The diligent effort requirement
For marriages of 10+ years, the spouse seeking maintenance must also show they have diligently sought employment, training, and educational opportunities to become self-sufficient. A spouse who has simply not worked is not automatically entitled to maintenance — they must demonstrate they have actively tried to improve their earning capacity.
How Much Can a Court Order? The Statutory Caps
Even if you qualify, Texas strictly limits what a court can award:
| Marriage Length | Maximum Duration | Monthly Cap |
|---|---|---|
| Under 10 years | Not available (except family violence/disability) | Lesser of $5,000 or 20% gross income |
| 10–19 years | Up to 5 years | Lesser of $5,000 or 20% gross income |
| 20–29 years | Up to 7 years | Lesser of $5,000 or 20% gross income |
| 30+ years | Up to 10 years | Lesser of $5,000 or 20% gross income |
| Disability (any length) | Indefinite while disability continues | Lesser of $5,000 or 20% gross income |
Courts order the shortest duration necessary for the receiving spouse to become self-supporting — not automatically the maximum. If a judge believes two years of support would allow a spouse to complete training and become employed, they will order two years, not five.
Texas spousal maintenance is designed to help a dependent spouse get back on their feet — not to permanently equalize income or compensate for a long marriage. The court’s goal is rehabilitation, not restitution.
The Second Path: Contractual Alimony in an Uncontested Divorce
Here is what almost nobody tells you — and it is the most important thing in this entire guide:
In an uncontested divorce, both spouses can agree to any spousal support arrangement they want — with no statutory caps, no duration limits, and no eligibility requirements.
This is called contractual alimony. It is treated as a binding contract between the parties, incorporated into the Final Decree of Divorce. Texas courts will enforce it as a contract, not as a court order — which means different rules for modification and enforcement, but complete freedom to structure support however makes sense for your situation.
What Contractual Alimony Unlocks That Court-Ordered Maintenance Cannot
Both spouses agree to $8,000/month? $12,000? Any amount is enforceable. Court-ordered maintenance caps at $5,000.
15 years of support? 20 years? Indefinite? All possible by agreement. Court-ordered maintenance caps at 10 years.
Married only 7 years? Spouse has good earning capacity? None of the court eligibility requirements apply to an agreed arrangement.
Payments can be structured to increase, decrease, or terminate based on custom events — job attainment, children’s milestones, housing changes.
The Uncontested Advantage — More Money Available for Everyone
This is the angle that gets overlooked in virtually every alimony discussion. When a divorce is contested — with attorneys billing $300–$500 per hour on both sides — tens of thousands of dollars that could have been available as spousal support instead go to legal fees.
Consider a couple where one spouse has significantly higher income and both agree that some support is fair. In a contested divorce, $40,000 in combined legal fees eats directly into the marital estate before a single dollar reaches the lower-earning spouse. In an uncontested divorce at $2,500–$4,500, those resources remain in the family — available as agreed spousal support, property settlement, or both.
An uncontested divorce is not just cheaper. It creates more total resources to negotiate with. See our full cost breakdown of contested vs. uncontested divorce →
What Courts Consider When Awarding Spousal Maintenance
When a judge decides whether to award maintenance and in what amount, Texas Family Code § 8.052 requires consideration of these factors:
- Each spouse’s financial resources after divorce, including the separate and community property awarded
- Education and employment skills of each spouse — and the time needed to get training to find appropriate employment
- Duration of the marriage
- Age, employment history, earning ability, and physical and emotional condition of each spouse
- Whether either spouse contributed to the education, training, or increased earning power of the other
- Whether a spouse acted in bad faith to hide assets or run up debt before divorce
- Contributions as a homemaker — raising children, supporting the other spouse’s career
- Any marital misconduct, including adultery or cruel treatment
- The nature of each spouse’s separate property after the divorce
When Spousal Support Ends in Texas
Court-ordered spousal maintenance terminates automatically upon:
- The death of either spouse
- The remarriage of the receiving spouse
- The receiving spouse cohabitating with a romantic partner on a continuing basis in a permanent place of abode
- The expiration of the court-ordered duration
For contractual alimony, termination depends on the specific terms agreed to. If remarriage is not addressed, payments may continue after remarriage. If cohabitation is not addressed, payments may continue during cohabitation. This is why precise attorney drafting of contractual alimony terms is critical — vague agreements create expensive disputes later.
Tax Treatment of Alimony After 2018
This changed significantly and many people still have the wrong information. Under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, for all divorces finalized after December 31, 2018:
- The paying spouse cannot deduct spousal maintenance payments from federal taxes
- The receiving spouse does not report payments as taxable income
For divorces finalized before January 1, 2019, the old rules still apply — deductible for the payer, taxable for the recipient. If your divorce predates 2019, consult a tax professional before agreeing to any modification that could affect the tax treatment.
Gray divorce and spousal maintenance
Couples divorcing over 50 face unique spousal support considerations — longer marriages mean longer potential maintenance periods, but fewer earning years ahead mean the receiving spouse may need more than the statutory cap allows. Contractual alimony is particularly valuable in gray divorces because it can be structured to bridge a specific gap until Social Security, pension, or retirement income kicks in. See our Gray Divorce guide →
When spousal maintenance requires litigation
If your spouse disputes spousal maintenance, refuses to pay court-ordered support, or your situation involves domestic violence, disability, or complex income calculation — Fritz & Phillips, P.C. provides full contested family law representation throughout Southeast Texas. Call (713) 930-2500.
Structure Your Spousal Support the Way That Works for You.
In an uncontested divorce, you negotiate your own support arrangement — no caps, no eligibility tests, no judge deciding. Flat-fee attorney representation starting at $2,500. Most cases finalized in 61 days. Court filing fees billed separately at cost. Financing available.
Free Consultation → See All Pricing →Frequently Asked Questions — Alimony & Spousal Support in Texas
Free Guide: The Uncontested Divorce Advantage
The complete guide to uncontested divorce in Texas — written by Jessica Fritz, J.D. Everything you need to know before you call.
- The 61-day timeline, step by step
- How retirement accounts and property are handled
- Flat-fee pricing — what's included and what isn't
- 7-question flowchart to confirm you qualify
- Spousal support options courts can't order but agreements can