Spousal support is where Texas divorces get emotional fast. One spouse spent fifteen years raising kids in Casa Linda while the other built a career, and now needs runway to stand on their own. Or one spouse worked double shifts for a decade and is being asked to fund an ex who could work but won’t. Texas law threads that needle more restrictively than almost any state — court-ordered maintenance is hard to get, capped in amount, and limited in time — but the statute is only half the story, because most support that actually gets paid in Dallas County is negotiated, not ordered. A spousal support lawyer at The Piri Law Firm’s East Dallas office at 8021 I-30 Frontage Rd handles both sides of these fights: building claims that qualify, and dismantling claims that don’t.
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The Three Kinds of “Alimony” in Texas — and Why the Difference Controls Your Strategy
Temporary spousal support keeps the lights on while the divorce is pending. It’s ordered at the temporary orders hearing based on need and ability to pay, and it ends at the decree. If you’re the lower-earning spouse, requesting it early matters; if you’re the higher earner, the temporary number tends to anchor later negotiations, so it’s worth contesting rather than conceding.
Court-ordered spousal maintenance is the statutory, post-divorce support under Texas Family Code Chapter 8 — the version with the eligibility gates, caps, and duration limits covered below. It’s enforceable by wage withholding and contempt, like child support.
Contractual alimony is support agreed to in settlement. Because it’s a contract rather than a statutory award, it can exceed every cap and time limit in Chapter 8 — which makes it the most flexible tool in a Texas divorce. In practice, contractual alimony is currency: it gets traded against the house, a business one spouse wants to keep whole, or a retirement account nobody wants to split with a QDRO. But it’s enforceable only as a contract, not by contempt, so the drafting — security, acceleration, termination triggers — is where cases are won or lost years later.
Understanding which vehicle you’re negotiating changes everything about the negotiation. Plenty of spouses who could never win maintenance in court receive meaningful contractual alimony at mediation, because the paying spouse valued certainty, the business, or the house more than the monthly number.
Who Qualifies for Court-Ordered Maintenance
The requesting spouse must first show they’ll lack sufficient property after the divorce to meet their minimum reasonable needs — a deliberately modest standard, not the marital lifestyle. Then they must pass through one of four gates: a marriage of ten years or more combined with an inability to earn enough to meet those needs; a family violence conviction or deferred adjudication against the other spouse within two years of filing (no minimum marriage length); the requesting spouse’s own incapacitating disability; or care of a disabled child that prevents adequate employment.
For the ten-year gate — by far the most common — the statute stacks a presumption against maintenance unless the requesting spouse shows diligence in seeking work or developing skills. Dallas County judges enforce that seriously: a spouse who hasn’t applied for a job or a training program since separation starts underwater, while a spouse with a folder of applications, a community college enrollment, and a vocational plan starts credible.
The Caps: What Maintenance Can Actually Be
Even a winning claim runs into hard statutory ceilings. Monthly maintenance cannot exceed the lesser of $5,000 or 20% of the payor’s average gross monthly income. Duration is tied to marriage length: up to five years for marriages of 10–20 years (and family-violence cases), up to seven years for 20–30, up to ten years for 30-plus — and even within those ceilings, courts must order the shortest reasonable period that gets the spouse to self-sufficiency. Disability-based maintenance can run as long as the disability does.
Maintenance ends automatically at either party’s death or the recipient’s remarriage, and the payor can move to terminate on proof the recipient is cohabiting with a romantic partner on a continuing basis — a fact pattern we litigate with the same documentation discipline as any other contested issue.
Run the arithmetic before you fight: for a $6,000-gross-per-month payor, the ceiling is $1,200 a month, likely for less than five years. Sometimes that’s life-changing money worth every hearing; sometimes it’s less than the fees a scorched-earth fight would burn, and a property trade — more of the 401(k), the house with a refinance deadline — serves the same need better. We give East Dallas clients that math honestly at the first consultation.
Building the Claim — or the Defense
For the requesting spouse, the case is a documented needs-and-diligence file: a realistic monthly budget with proof behind every line, a vocational narrative (what you did before the marriage, what the marriage interrupted, what retraining costs and how long it takes), medical records where disability is the gate, and the payor’s true income — which, for the self-employed, means the same tax-return and bank-record work we do in child support cases. Fault matters too: adultery and cruelty are statutory factors, and evidence of either strengthens both the maintenance claim and the property division in a contested divorce.
For the paying spouse, the defense tracks the statute point by point: the property division itself may cover minimum reasonable needs (a spouse leaving with substantial liquid assets rarely qualifies); the diligence presumption may be standing unrebutted; the claimed budget may be padded past “minimum reasonable”; and earning capacity may be provable with a vocational evaluation showing what the requesting spouse could earn now. Where some payment is inevitable, converting it to structured contractual alimony — fixed, front-loaded, secured, and traded against property — usually beats an open-ended court order for both sides.
Enforcement, Modification, and the Tax Rule Everyone Gets Wrong
Court-ordered maintenance is enforceable by wage withholding and contempt; contractual alimony is enforceable only as a breach-of-contract claim, which is why security provisions belong in the agreement. Court-ordered maintenance can be modified downward on a material and substantial change in the payor’s circumstances — job loss, disability — but never increased above the original award; contractual alimony changes only as the contract allows.
On taxes: for divorces finalized after 2018, alimony is not deductible by the payor and not income to the recipient under federal law — the reverse of decades of conventional wisdom still circulating online. The IRS states the current rule in its alimony guidance, and the change reshapes settlement math, since a dollar of alimony now costs the payor a full after-tax dollar.
Immigration and the Affidavit of Support: The East Dallas Question
At the I-30 office we hear it weekly: my spouse sponsored my green card — does that change anything? Yes, potentially a lot. A sponsor who signed Form I-864, Affidavit of Support, took on a federal contractual obligation to maintain the immigrant spouse at 125% of the poverty line — an obligation that survives divorce and is separate from anything Texas maintenance law says. It’s enforceable in its own right and doesn’t terminate on the Texas timeline. Sponsored spouses may have a claim their divorce lawyer never mentions; sponsoring spouses need settlements drafted with that exposure addressed. Because The Piri Law Firm runs a full immigration divorce practice alongside family law, we negotiate support with both bodies of law on the table. Consultations in Spanish and French; general legal-aid resources are also available at TexasLawHelp.org.
Why East Dallas Chooses The Piri Law Firm
Michael Piri is a Texas attorney practicing Family Law, Criminal Defense, Personal Injury, and Immigration — verify his licensure on his State Bar of Texas profile. He earned his J.D. from St. Mary’s University School of Law and is fluent in Spanish and French. Free 30-minute consultations, payment plans, virtual appointments, 24/7 availability. Visit our East Dallas office page for directions, and read client reviews on our Google Business Profile.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. Is alimony automatic after 10 years of marriage in Texas?
Ans: No. Ten years only opens eligibility — the requesting spouse must still prove they can’t meet minimum reasonable needs and have diligently pursued work or training. Many long marriages end with no court-ordered maintenance at all.
Q. What’s the most spousal maintenance a Texas court can order?
Ans: The lesser of $5,000 per month or 20% of the payor’s average gross monthly income, for a maximum of 5, 7, or 10 years depending on marriage length — longer only for disability.
Q. Can we agree to more alimony than the law allows?
Ans: Yes. Contractual alimony negotiated in settlement can exceed every statutory cap and time limit. It’s enforceable as a contract rather than by contempt, so precise drafting matters.
Q. Does my spouse’s affair affect alimony?
Ans: It can. Adultery and cruelty are statutory factors in setting maintenance and can also support a disproportionate property division in the same case.
Q. My ex sponsored my green card. Does divorce end their obligation to support me?
Ans: Not necessarily. The I-864 Affidavit of Support creates a federal obligation that survives divorce and is independent of Texas maintenance law — a claim worth evaluating with a firm that handles both family and immigration law.
Q. The Piri Law Firm — East Dallas Office
Ans: 8021 I-30 Frontage Rd, Dallas, TX 75228 · (833) 600-0029 · Free 30-minute consultation, 24/7 · Nosotros hablamos español
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This article is for general information only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship.

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