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.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania distinguishes between spousal support, alimony pendente lite (APL), and post-divorce alimony. Pre-divorce support is commonly calculated using statewide support guidelines based on the parties' net incomes, while post-divorce alimony is determined through statutory factors and judicial discretion. The primary purpose of alimony is to address reasonable economic needs after divorce when property division alone is insufficient.
Eligibility: A spouse seeking post-divorce alimony must demonstrate financial need and show that equitable distribution alone is insufficient to meet reasonable expenses. Courts evaluate income, earning capacity, assets, liabilities, age, health, and contributions made during the marriage. Eligibility depends on the totality of circumstances rather than marriage length alone.