Calculation
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. Wyoming: Conservative educational estimate based on need, ability to pay, income disparity, marriage length, property division, earning capacity, age, health, standard of living, and equitable circumstances; no mandatory statewide formula applies.
Duration
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. Wyoming: Wyoming has no fixed statutory duration formula. Alimony may be temporary during separation or divorce, rehabilitative for a defined period, lump-sum, periodic, longer-term, or denied depending on the facts. Short marriages often result in no alimony or short transitional support. Longer support may be possible after long marriages or where age, health, disability, limited earning capacity, or substantial dependency prevents self-support, but no duration is automatic.
Modification
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. Wyoming: Wyoming alimony may be modified when a material change in circumstances justifies review and the award is modifiable under the decree and law. Courts evaluate changed need, income, health, employment, or ability to pay.