Alabama
Alabama alimony law emphasizes rehabilitative support first, with periodic alimony available only when rehabilitation is not feasible or is insufficient. Courts must make statutory findings before awarding rehabilitative or periodic alimony under Ala. Code § 30-2-57. The state does not use a mandatory mathematical formula for amount or duration.
Eligibility: A spouse may qualify only if the court finds that the spouse lacks a sufficient separate estate to preserve, as much as possible, the marital economic status quo, the other spouse can pay without undue economic hardship, and the circumstances make alimony equitable. Rehabilitative alimony is generally preferred and is commonly limited in duration. Periodic alimony is reserved for cases where rehabilitation is not feasible or fails to preserve the economic status quo.
Connecticut
Connecticut authorizes alimony when the court finds support appropriate after considering the statutory factors in Conn. Gen. Stat. § 46b-82. The state does not use a mandatory formula for amount or duration. Courts evaluate need, ability to pay, marriage length, earning capacity, property division, health, age, and the causes of the marital breakdown.
Eligibility: A spouse may qualify if the court determines that alimony is appropriate after reviewing the statutory factors and financial evidence. Courts examine income, earning capacity, estate, vocational skills, employability, needs, health, age, and property awards. Eligibility is case-specific and is not established by income disparity alone.