The Four Types of Alimony in Florida (and Which Applies to You)
Florida’s 2023 alimony reform eliminated permanent alimony for new cases and replaced it with four time-limited categories: bridge-the-gap, rehabilitative, durational, and temporary. Which one applies depends on the length of the marriage, the receiving spouse’s needs, and the paying spouse’s ability.
Alimony — called spousal support in some other states — is one of the most consequential financial issues in a Florida divorce. In 2023, the Florida Legislature significantly reformed the alimony statute, eliminating permanent alimony for new cases and creating clearer rules for the four categories that remain. This article explains how each type works and when it applies.
The Threshold: Need and Ability to Pay
Before any alimony is awarded, the court must make two findings under Fla. Stat. § 61.08:
- The requesting spouse has an actual need for support.
- The other spouse has the ability to pay.
Both findings are required. If the requesting spouse has sufficient income and assets, no alimony is awarded regardless of the other spouse’s ability to pay. If the paying spouse lacks the ability to pay, no alimony is awarded regardless of need.
Length-of-Marriage Categories
Florida law classifies marriages into three duration categories:
- Short-term: less than 10 years.
- Moderate-term: 10 to less than 20 years.
- Long-term: 20 years or more.
Marriage length is measured from the date of marriage to the date the divorce petition was filed. Length affects which types of alimony are available and how long alimony can last.
1. Bridge-the-Gap Alimony
Purpose: Help a spouse transition from married to single life by covering identifiable, short-term needs.
Duration: Maximum of two years.
Modifiable: No. Not modifiable in amount or duration.
Bridge-the-gap alimony covers needs like rental deposits, moving costs, or replacing items left in the marital home. It is the most limited type of alimony and is appropriate when the gap is real but short.
2. Rehabilitative Alimony
Purpose: Support a specific plan for the recipient to develop skills, training, or education needed to become self-supporting.
Duration: Maximum of five years.
Modifiable: Yes, on substantial change in circumstances or noncompliance with the rehabilitation plan.
The recipient must present a specific and defined rehabilitative plan — a degree program, professional certification, or other concrete plan with timeline and budget. Vague or aspirational plans are typically rejected. The award is tied to the cost of the plan and the time required.
3. Durational Alimony
Purpose: Provide economic support for a defined period when permanent alimony is not appropriate.
Eligibility: Available after marriages of any length, except very short marriages where the court is not persuaded that durational alimony is justified.
Duration limits:
- Short-term marriage (less than 10 years): durational alimony cannot exceed 50% of the length of the marriage.
- Moderate-term marriage (10 to less than 20 years): cannot exceed 60% of the length.
- Long-term marriage (20 years or more): cannot exceed 75% of the length.
Amount limits: Generally cannot exceed the actual need of the recipient or 35% of the difference between the parties’ net incomes, whichever is less.
Modifiable: Amount is generally modifiable on substantial change in circumstances; duration is more difficult to modify.
Durational alimony is now the workhorse of long-term post-divorce support — replacing what used to be called permanent alimony. The 2023 reform structured durational alimony to be substantial enough to support recipients of long marriages while still being time-limited.
4. Temporary Alimony
Purpose: Provide support during the pendency of the divorce proceeding.
Duration: Until the final judgment is entered.
Modifiable: Yes, by motion during the divorce.
Temporary alimony, sometimes called pendente lite support, addresses needs that arise during the divorce itself — ongoing living expenses, mortgage payments, and similar. It is set by motion early in the case and replaced by the final award (if any) at the end.
How Courts Decide Alimony Amount
Once need and ability to pay are established, the court considers statutory factors under Fla. Stat. § 61.08(3), including:
- The standard of living established during the marriage.
- The duration of the marriage.
- The age and physical and emotional condition of each party.
- The financial resources of each party, including marital and non-marital assets and liabilities.
- The earning capacities, educational levels, vocational skills, and employability of the parties.
- The contribution of each party to the marriage, including services rendered in homemaking, child care, education, and career-building of the other party.
- The responsibilities each party will have for any minor children they have in common.
- The tax treatment and consequences of alimony for both parties.
- All sources of income available to either party.
- Any other factor necessary for equity and justice between the parties.
What the 2023 Reform Changed
The 2023 alimony reform was the most significant change to Florida alimony law in decades. Key changes:
- Permanent alimony eliminated for cases filed after the law’s effective date.
- Durational alimony expanded with explicit duration caps tied to the length of the marriage.
- Amount caps introduced for durational alimony.
- Retirement modification rules clarified, providing pathways for paying spouses to seek modification or termination upon reaching retirement age.
- Cohabitation rules updated regarding termination or modification of alimony when the recipient is in a supportive relationship.
Existing alimony obligations from cases finalized before the reform generally remain governed by the prior law, though some modification rules were also updated.
The Bottom Line
Florida alimony is no longer the open-ended, lifetime obligation it once was. The four current types — bridge-the-gap, rehabilitative, durational, and temporary — are each tied to a specific purpose and a defined duration. The right type for your situation depends on the length of the marriage, the receiving spouse’s needs, the paying spouse’s ability, and a wide range of statutory factors. An early consultation with a Miami-Dade family law attorney can help you understand realistic outcomes and develop an effective strategy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Florida still have permanent alimony?
Permanent alimony was eliminated by the 2023 alimony reform for cases filed after the law's effective date. Existing alimony awards from cases finalized before the reform generally remain governed by the prior law, though some modification rules were also updated.
How long can durational alimony last in Florida?
Durational alimony cannot exceed 50% of the length of a short-term marriage (under 10 years), 60% of a moderate-term marriage (10 to less than 20 years), or 75% of a long-term marriage (20 years or more).
What's the difference between bridge-the-gap and rehabilitative alimony?
Bridge-the-gap alimony covers short, identifiable transition needs (like a rental deposit) and is capped at two years and not modifiable. Rehabilitative alimony supports a specific plan for education or training to become self-supporting, is capped at five years, and is modifiable.
How is alimony calculated in Florida?
There is no fixed formula. The court first determines whether the requesting spouse has need and the other has ability to pay. The amount is then set considering statutory factors including the marriage length, standard of living, financial resources, earning capacities, and contributions of each party. Durational alimony cannot exceed the recipient's need or 35% of the income difference between the parties, whichever is less.
Can alimony be modified after the divorce?
Most alimony types can be modified on a substantial change in circumstances. Bridge-the-gap alimony is not modifiable. Rehabilitative and durational alimony can be modified in amount; durational alimony's duration is more difficult to modify. Cohabitation in a supportive relationship and the paying spouse's retirement are common grounds for modification.
Speak with a Miami Family Law Attorney
Pazos Law Group offers confidential consultations for divorce and family law matters in Miami-Dade and surrounding counties.
Schedule a Confidential ConsultationThe information on this page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading or sharing this content does not create an attorney-client relationship with Pazos Law Group. Florida law and the application of statutes change over time; please consult a licensed Florida attorney about your specific situation.