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State alimony comparison

Arizona vs Florida Alimony Laws

Compare Arizona and Florida alimony rules, formulas, duration limits, eligibility requirements, modification standards, and court discretion.
Reviewed by SettleCompass Research TeamUpdated June 2026Comparison guide
Educational content only

Recommended workflow

Compare the rules, then test the same facts in each state.

Start with the legal differences below, run one shared estimate scenario, then open each state guide for the detailed framework courts may apply.

Quick Comparison

Use this side-by-side data view as a starting point, then review the linked state law guides and calculators for deeper planning context.

FactorArizonaFlorida
Support termspousal maintenancealimony
Formula profileformulastatutory-net
Property systemcommunityequitable
Legal frameworkTemporary spousal maintenance may be awarded while a dissolution action is pending to address immediate financial needs. Final spousal maintenance is governed by A.R.S. § 25-319 and requires separate findings regarding eligibility and the appropriate amount and duration of support.Temporary alimony may be awarded while the divorce is pending to maintain financial stability during litigation. Final alimony awards are governed by Florida Statutes § 61.08 and require findings regarding both need and ability to pay before any award can be entered.
Statute citationA.R.S. § 25-319Florida Statutes § 61.08 (2026)

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Arizona and Florida calculators for same-fact estimates.

Remember

Support outcomes still depend on judge discretion, facts, and local procedure.

Same-facts estimate

Compare estimated support with one scenario

Use the same income and marriage facts to see how the planning estimate changes between Arizona and Florida. This is educational, not a court prediction.

Arizona

Educational approximation of Arizona's guideline range using a conservative income-disparity proxy: 20% of the difference between payer spousal-maintenance income and recipient spousal-maintenance income, adjusted for marriage length and self-sufficiency factors.

Moderate

$1,333/mo

Planning range: $1,066-$1,600/mo

Duration: 120 to under 192 months

Florida

Statutory durational-alimony estimate: the lesser of the recipient's reasonable need or 35% of the difference between the parties' net incomes, adjusted conservatively for marriage length and ability to pay.

Moderate

$1,750/mo

Planning range: $1,400-$2,100/mo

Duration: About 9 years

Key Differences

Calculation

Arizona: Educational approximation of Arizona's guideline range using a conservative income-disparity proxy: 20% of the difference between payer spousal-maintenance income and recipient spousal-maintenance income, adjusted for marriage length and self-sufficiency factors. Florida: Florida no longer awards permanent alimony for initial petitions governed by the current statute. Courts may award temporary, bridge-the-gap, rehabilitative, or durational alimony only after making specific factual findings that the requesting spouse has actual need and the other spouse has ability to pay. Durational alimony is capped at reasonable need or 35% of the parties' net-income difference, whichever is less.

Duration

Arizona: Arizona guideline duration is tied to marriage length and self-sufficiency. Standard ranges are: under 24 months of marriage, 3-12 months; 24 to under 60 months, 6-36 months; 60 to under 120 months, 6-48 months; 120 to under 192 months, 12-60 months; and 192 months or more, 12-144 months or 50% of the marriage length, whichever is greater, unless the Rule of 65, disability, or extraordinary circumstances apply. The Rule of 65 applies when the requesting spouse is at least 42, the marriage lasted at least 16 years, and age plus marriage length equals or exceeds 65; in those cases duration is determined case-by-case. Florida: Florida classifies marriages as short-term if less than 10 years, moderate-term if 10 to less than 20 years, and long-term if 20 years or more. Bridge-the-gap alimony may not exceed 2 years. Rehabilitative alimony may not exceed 5 years and requires a specific rehabilitative plan. Durational alimony may not be awarded after a marriage lasting less than 3 years. Durational alimony may not exceed 50% of a short-term marriage, 60% of a moderate-term marriage, or 75% of a long-term marriage, except under exceptional circumstances proven by clear and convincing evidence.

Modification

Arizona: Spousal maintenance may generally be modified upon a substantial and continuing change in circumstances unless the decree expressly makes maintenance non-modifiable. Courts review changes affecting need, income, employability, or ability to pay. Florida: Most alimony awards may be modified upon a substantial, material, and unanticipated change in circumstances. The party requesting modification must demonstrate that the statutory standard has been satisfied.

State Profiles

Arizona

Arizona refers to support after divorce as spousal maintenance and follows a two-step analysis. Courts first determine whether a spouse qualifies under one of the eligibility categories in A.R.S. § 25-319(A), then determine amount and duration using statutory factors in § 25-319(B). No mandatory statewide formula governs final maintenance awards.

Eligibility: A spouse may qualify by lacking sufficient property to provide for reasonable needs, being unable to achieve self-sufficiency through employment, contributing to the other spouse's education or career opportunities, having a marriage of long duration and advanced age limiting employability, or caring for a child whose condition limits outside employment. The court must first establish eligibility before considering amount and duration. Qualification is not automatic merely because one spouse earns more than the other.

Florida

Florida awards alimony based on the receiving spouse's need and the paying spouse's ability to pay. Following major statutory reforms, Florida eliminated permanent alimony and now relies primarily on bridge-the-gap, rehabilitative, and durational forms of support. Courts must evaluate statutory factors before determining amount and duration.

Eligibility: A spouse seeking alimony must demonstrate a genuine financial need, while the other spouse must have the ability to contribute support. Courts examine income, assets, liabilities, earning capacity, and the marital standard of living. Qualification depends on the total circumstances rather than marriage length alone.

Duration, Eligibility, and Modification

Duration Comparison

  • Arizona: 0-5 years, 5-15 years, 15 years to potentially indefinite
  • Florida: 0-10 years, 10-20 years, 20 years or more

Eligibility Comparison

  • Arizona: A spouse may qualify by lacking sufficient property to provide for reasonable needs, being unable to achieve self-sufficiency through employment, contributing to the other spouse's education or career opportunities, having a marriage of long duration and advanced age limiting employability, or caring for a child whose condition limits outside employment. The court must first establish eligibility before considering amount and duration. Qualification is not automatic merely because one spouse earns more than the other.
  • Florida: A spouse seeking alimony must demonstrate a genuine financial need, while the other spouse must have the ability to contribute support. Courts examine income, assets, liabilities, earning capacity, and the marital standard of living. Qualification depends on the total circumstances rather than marriage length alone.

Modification Comparison

  • Arizona: Spousal maintenance may generally be modified upon a substantial and continuing change in circumstances unless the decree expressly makes maintenance non-modifiable. Courts review changes affecting need, income, employability, or ability to pay.
  • Florida: Most alimony awards may be modified upon a substantial, material, and unanticipated change in circumstances. The party requesting modification must demonstrate that the statutory standard has been satisfied.

Arizona vs Florida Alimony FAQ

Why compare Arizona and Florida alimony laws?+

Alimony rules vary by state. Comparing two states helps readers understand differences in formulas, duration ranges, eligibility rules, modification standards, and judicial discretion before deeper research.

Are these comparison pages legal advice?+

No. SettleCompass comparison pages are educational planning resources only and do not replace advice from a licensed family law attorney.

Can the same income produce different alimony estimates by state?+

Yes. State formulas, income caps, duration rules, statutory factors, and judge discretion can produce different outcomes from the same basic facts.

What to review next

Compare Estimates With the Calculator

Use state-specific calculator pages to model the same income and marriage-length assumptions across both states.