Calculation
Georgia: Conservative educational estimate based on need, ability to pay, income disparity, marriage length, marital standard of living, earning capacity, financial resources, and Georgia statutory factors; no mandatory statewide formula applies. Kentucky: Conservative educational estimate based on statutory eligibility, reasonable need, ability to pay, income disparity, marriage length, financial resources, earning capacity, standard of living, age, health, and Kentucky statutory factors; no mandatory statewide formula applies.
Duration
Georgia: Georgia has no fixed statutory duration formula. Temporary alimony may apply while the case is pending. Post-divorce alimony may be periodic, lump sum, short-term, long-term, or reserved depending on the facts. Longer marriages and greater economic dependency may support longer awards, but duration remains discretionary. Alimony may terminate or be modified according to the order, agreement, remarriage, death, cohabitation rules, or changed circumstances where applicable. Kentucky: Kentucky has no fixed statutory duration formula. Maintenance may be temporary during the case, rehabilitative for a defined period tied to education, training, or employment, or longer-term in appropriate cases involving long marriages, age, health limitations, or limited earning capacity. Duration depends on reasonable need, ability to pay, marriage length, self-support prospects, property division, and the court's equitable judgment.
Modification
Georgia: Periodic alimony may be modified upon a material change in the financial circumstances of either party. Courts evaluate whether the change is substantial enough to justify adjustment of the existing order. Kentucky: Maintenance may be modified under KRS § 403.250 upon changed circumstances so substantial and continuing as to make the existing terms unconscionable. Agreements may restrict modification if validly incorporated into the decree.