When a judge decides on alimony, the length of the marriage is one of the most important factors taken into account. A judge is unlikely to grant permanent spousal maintenance to one spouse if the marriage lasted only two years or less unless there are children.<\/p>\n
Unless there are children or other circumstances that prevented the receiver from working to earn money while the marriage lasted, the judge may not award alimony<\/a> after years of marriage.<\/p>\n
Depending on the number of years the marriage lasted and the laws of the state where you lived<\/a>, here’s what you need to understand so you a prepare a course of action to preserve wealth and save legal costs.<\/p>\n
Aside from the length of the marriage, judges also take some other factors and circumstances into consideration when deciding alimony after years of marriage.<\/p>\n
Some of these factors include the age of the duration of the marriage, divorced couple, their earnings or lack of it, if either had to stop work in order to cater to the family (including children.)<\/p>\n
The judges put all these together, then rule on how long the alimony should last and issue the order. Let’s take a look at your likely entitlements and obligations after “X” years of marriage.<\/p>\n