Florida Alimony Calculator
Estimate (non-binding) alimony using common guidelines and Florida durational limits. See disclaimer below.
Full Disclaimer
A Florida alimony calculator is an online tool that estimates a likely spousal-support payment by combining commonly used guideline formulas (for example, the AAML guideline) with Florida’s statutory durational limits to provide a non-binding planning estimate.
How to Use the Florida Alimony Calculator: A practical guide
When people search “Florida alimony calculator” they want a quick, understandable estimate of potential alimony awards, how long support may last, and how judges commonly think about amounts. This article walks through what the calculator does, the assumptions behind its math, how to run accurate scenarios, and how to interpret the results responsibly.
What this calculator estimates (and what it does not)
The calculator uses a widely-referenced guideline — frequently called the American Association of Matrimonial Lawyers (AAML) guideline — which estimates alimony as roughly 30% of the payor’s gross annual income minus 20% of the payee’s gross annual income. That guideline is a planning tool and not a legal rule. Florida statutes give judges broad discretion and also place limits on durational awards (for example, caps on the duration of durational alimony tied to marriage length). The tool combines the guideline estimate with optional caps — for example a 35% cap of a payor’s net income if you provide net-income figures — and highlights Florida’s durational-duration categories so you can see how long awards commonly run.
Important: The calculator provides an estimate only, not legal advice. Many factors affect actual awards — assets, debts, child support, health, age, earning capacity, adultery or other conduct, tax consequences, and more. Courts also interpret statutory factors under Florida Statute §61.08 and apply case-specific judgment.
Step-by-step: Using the calculator effectively
1. Enter accurate incomes
Use current annual gross incomes for both spouses. If you know a reliable payor net monthly income, enter it to see the optional 35% net cap applied — this cap is a conservative check many practitioners use in planning, though it’s not a strict legal ceiling for every case.
2. Enter the marriage length (years)
The calculator displays the durational cap category. Florida’s statute sets commonly used duration percentages (for example, shorter marriages have shorter maximum durational periods; moderate and long marriages allow longer durational awards). Those rules affect how long support may continue, not directly the monthly dollar figure — but duration and amount together determine the total economic transfer.
3. Choose monthly or annual output
You can view the suggested estimate as a monthly or annual amount. Judges might order periodic monthly payments, lump sum, or a mix; this calculator shows periodic estimates to help with budgeting.
4. Apply the optional 35% cap (if you have net income)
If a realistic net-income figure for the payor is provided, you can limit the guideline estimate to 35% of that net income — a conservative filter used by some attorneys and calculators. This protects against results that would otherwise exceed an affordable level. Use caution: this is only a planning heuristic.
5. Read the chart and notes
The built-in Plotly graph visually compares payor gross, payee gross, and estimated alimony (annual). Visuals help stakeholders quickly see relative sizes and spot unrealistic outcomes before negotiations or court filings.
Interpreting the results: practical tips
- Treat the number as a starting point. Real awards depend on need and ability to pay; judges weigh many statutory factors. Use the estimate to plan budgets, evaluate settlement offers, or prepare questions for your attorney.
- Compare multiple scenarios. Change incomes, toggles, and marriage length to see how sensitive the estimate is. That’s especially useful when income is variable or bonuses are likely.
- Consider the total package. Alimony is only one part of financial settlement. Property division, child support, tax consequences, and debt allocation all matter. Always combine outputs with a broader financial plan.
Why Plotly.js was used (and why visuals matter)
Plotly provides accessible, responsive charts that render inside WordPress content areas and help users grasp scale quickly. A bar chart comparing payor, payee, and estimated alimony converts abstract dollars into visual context, improving engagement and retention — search engines and readers reward content that keeps users on the page and helps them complete their goal.
Short legal disclaimer (also in the tool)
This calculator is a planning tool only. It uses guideline formulas and publicly available statutory information to produce estimates; it is not legal advice and cannot predict court outcomes. For legal guidance tailored to your circumstances, consult a qualified Florida family law attorney.
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
Q1: Is the calculator accurate?
A1: The calculator gives a commonly used guideline estimate, but Florida law provides judges broad discretion. Use the tool for planning and discussion — it cannot guarantee a court result.
Q2: What inputs produce the best estimate?
A2: Accurate current gross incomes for both parties and a reliable payor net monthly income (if using the 35% cap) produce the most useful estimates. Also enter the true marriage length in years to see durational information.
Q3: Does the calculator compute child support?
A3: No. This tool focuses on alimony estimates. Child support in Florida follows a separate statutory calculation based on net incomes, number of children, and parenting time.
Q4: Does Florida have a set formula for alimony?
A4: No single statutory dollar formula controls every award. The AAML guideline is commonly used as a reference, and Florida’s statute provides durational limits and factors judges must consider.
Q5: Should I rely on this tool to negotiate a settlement?
A5: Use it as an informed starting point. Always verify results with an experienced family law attorney before accepting or proposing settlement terms.