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What is final periodic spousal support?

In a divorce proceeding, the court may award interim periodic spousal support or final periodic spousal support to a party free from fault in the divorce proceeding. Spousal support is ordered for the purpose of allowing the spouse with lesser income to pay for his or her living expenses and other needs.

What is spousal support based on?

As noted, alimony is generally based largely on what each of the divorcing spouses “reasonably earn.” That means that if a person is deliberately working at a job that pays less than what he or she could earn, the courts will sometimes figure the alimony amount based on a higher figure, in what is referred to as …

What is interim spousal support?

An award of interim spousal support is a temporary order that is eventually replaced by a final spousal support order upon the conclusion of divorce proceedings. Just like a final spousal support order, interim alimony is determined based on the parties respective income and expenses.

Final Periodic Spousal Support This refers to the courts final judgment regarding spousal support. The paying spouse must pay support based on the agreed-upon terms in the support order. Final periodic spousal support ends if it becomes necessary, if your ex-spouse dies, or if you remarry another person.

When does spousal support become part of a divorce?

The tax impact of spousal support (note: federal and state tax laws have not been changed to recognize domestic partnerships). The spousal or partner support order then becomes part of your final divorce or legal separation judgment.

Can a court change the amount of spousal support?

Some states, however, won’t modify spousal support at all—they allow courts to make orders only about child support after the divorce is final. (And in Texas, the support amount can only be modified downward!) Often, a court will order a temporary modification, just for the period of changed circumstances.

When does temporary alimony or spousal support come?

Temporary alimony or spousal support is an order for support that comes during a divorce, legal separation or even an annulment case after one party has filed such a request with the court. A hearing is set after a motion document called a “Request for Order” is filed with the family court.

When does a judge make a final spousal or partner support order?

When the judge makes his or her final spousal or partner support order, the judge must consider the factors in California Family Code section 4320. The tax impact of spousal support (note: federal and state tax laws have not been changed to recognize domestic partnerships).