Utah Alimony & Spousal
Support Calculator
Estimate spousal support using Utah's alimony calculation method and guidelines.
Estimate your Utah Alimony
Estimate spousal support using Utah's alimony calculation method and guidelines.
· Data sourced from Utah statutes and court fee schedules.
Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer
Utah uses a formula-based calculation for alimony — types available: temporary, rehabilitative, term, permanent (Utah Code § 30-3-5).
Key Takeaways
- Calculation: Formula-based
- Types available: temporary, rehabilitative, term, permanent
- Key factors: standard of living during marriage, needs of recipient, ability of payor, duration of marriage, recipient's earning capacity; duration generally cannot exceed marriage length
- Statute: Utah Code § 30-3-5
Key facts for Utah alimony
What drives alimony in Utah

Spousal support in Utah: How Utah Courts Award Alimony
Utah uses a statutory formula to calculate spousal support, providing a more predictable framework for divorcing spouses than pure judicial discretion. Under Utah Code § 30-3-5, the court applies a mathematical formula based on each spouse's gross income to determine both the amount and duration of alimony payments.
While the formula provides a presumptive guideline, Utah courts retain the ability to deviate from it when circumstances warrant.
The formula-based approach in Utah was designed to reduce divorce litigation costs and increase consistency across family law cases. The state's formula considers standard of living during marriage, needs of recipient, ability of payor, duration of marriage, recipient's earning capacity; duration generally cannot exceed marriage length.
However, the formula is just a starting point — judges may adjust the final spousal support award based on the specific facts of each case, including the standard of living during the marriage, the age and health of both parties, and the distribution of marital property.
Use our Utah alimony calculator above to estimate your spousal support obligation or entitlement based on the formula. Whether you are the paying spouse or the receiving spouse, the formula output gives you a realistic range to negotiate from before engaging with an attorney.
Family law attorneys in Salt Lake City and across Utah can explain how local courts apply the formula in practice and whether your facts support a deviation.
Types of Spousal support in Utah
Utah recognizes several types of spousal support: temporary, rehabilitative, term, permanent. Each serves a different purpose and applies under different divorce circumstances.
The type of alimony awarded depends on the length of the marriage, the financial circumstances of both spouses, and the specific needs demonstrated by the requesting party.
Temporary alimony (also called pendente lite spousal support) is awarded during the divorce proceedings to maintain the financial status quo while the case is pending. This type of support ensures that the lower-earning spouse can cover living expenses — including housing, utilities, and basic needs — until Utah courts issue a final spousal support order.
Temporary support automatically terminates when the final divorce decree is entered.
Rehabilitative alimony — also called rehabilitative support — is one of the most commonly awarded types in family law proceedings. It is designed to support a spouse for a limited period while they obtain education, training, or work experience necessary to become self-supporting.
The receiving spouse is typically required to present a rehabilitative plan outlining the steps they will take and the expected timeline for gaining sufficient earning capacity.
Permanent (or indefinite) spousal support may be awarded in long-term marriages, typically those lasting 20 years or more, or when the receiving spouse is unable to become self-supporting due to age, disability, or chronic illness. Despite the name, permanent alimony can still be modified or terminated under certain circumstances such as remarriage, cohabitation, or a material change in financial circumstances.
Utah courts have broad discretion in determining whether to award permanent support.

Calculating Spousal support in Utah
Utah uses a statutory formula to determine presumptive spousal support amounts based on each spouse's gross income. The formula works as follows: standard of living during marriage, needs of recipient, ability of payor, duration of marriage, recipient's earning capacity; duration generally cannot exceed marriage length.
This mathematical approach provides a starting point that both parties and their family law attorneys can use to estimate likely alimony obligations before going to court. For example, if the higher earner brings home $8,000/month and the lower earner makes $3,000/month, the formula produces a specific presumptive figure that the court can then adjust based on the circumstances of the case.
The formula calculates a presumptive amount, but Utah courts are not strictly bound by it. Judges may deviate from the formula result if the presumptive amount would be unjust or inappropriate given the specific circumstances of the divorce.
Common reasons for deviation include significant disparity in assets, one spouse's contribution as a homemaker, family violence, or the tax consequences of the spousal support award.
Duration of alimony is also guided by statutory formulas in Utah, typically based on a percentage of the length of the marriage. For shorter marriages, spousal support duration in many jurisdictions runs **15–30%** of the marriage length as a general benchmark — though Utah courts retain discretion to deviate based on the specific circumstances of each case.
For marriages exceeding 20 years, courts may award indefinite alimony. Use our Utah alimony calculator to estimate both the amount and duration based on your specific monthly gross income figures and marriage length.
Utah Spousal support Duration Guidelines
The length of the marriage is the single most important factor in determining how long alimony lasts in Utah. Short-term marriages (generally under 10 years) rarely result in long-term alimony awards.
When spousal support is granted for a short marriage, it is typically rehabilitative and limited to 2–5 years — enough time for the receiving spouse to become self-supporting through education or training.
For moderate-length marriages (10–20 years), spousal support duration in Utah is often set as a percentage of the marriage length. As a general benchmark used by many courts, that figure falls in the range of **30–50%** of the marriage — though Utah judges have discretion to award more or less based on the specific facts.
A 15-year marriage, for example, might result in a alimony award lasting 5–7 years. The specific duration depends on factors like the age of the receiving spouse, their earning capacity, and whether they sacrificed career opportunities during the marriage.
Long-term marriages (20+ years) may qualify for indefinite or permanent spousal support in Utah, particularly when the receiving spouse is older, has limited earning capacity, or made significant career sacrifices to support the family. Even permanent alimony is subject to review and modification if circumstances change substantially — for example, if the paying spouse retires or the receiving spouse begins cohabiting with a new partner.
Ready to calculate?
Get a free Utah estimate using actual statutory data.
Tax Rules & Modifying Utah Alimony
Under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017, alimony payments pursuant to divorce agreements executed after December 31, 2018 are no longer tax-deductible for the paying spouse or taxable income for the receiving spouse. This was a major change from prior law, where the payor could deduct spousal support payments and the recipient reported them as gross income.
If your divorce was finalized before 2019 and you have not modified the agreement, the old tax rules may still apply to your payments. See IRS Publication 504 (Divorced or Separated Individuals) for the federal tax treatment that applies regardless of state.
Spousal support orders in Utah can be modified if either spouse demonstrates a material change in circumstances. Common grounds for modification include significant changes in income (job loss, disability, retirement, or substantial raise), changes in the receiving spouse's financial needs, or the receiving spouse becoming self-supporting sooner than expected.
The party seeking modification bears the burden of proving the changed circumstances to Utah courts.
Spousal support in Utah typically terminates automatically upon the remarriage of the receiving spouse or the death of either party. Utah also allows termination or reduction of alimony if the receiving spouse enters into a supportive cohabitation arrangement — essentially living with a new partner in a marriage-like relationship.
For general information on divorce and support rights, USA.gov's divorce guide provides a plain-language overview of the legal steps involved. To find a qualified family law attorney in Utah, see the ABA Family Law Section's attorney locator.
Consult a family law attorney if any of these circumstances apply to your situation.

Spousal support vs. Child Support in Utah
In Utah, child support and alimony are calculated separately but interact with each other. Most Utah courts calculate child support first using the state's child support guidelines — use the Utah Child Support Estimator to see how that figure is determined — then determine spousal support based on the remaining gross income available to each spouse.
This sequencing matters because child support obligations reduce the paying spouse's available income for alimony purposes. Some states impose a combined cap, limiting total support payments (child support plus spousal support) to a percentage of the payor's gross income, often **40–50%**.
Unlike child support, which follows formulaic guidelines tied to income changes, alimony modification generally requires a more substantial showing of changed circumstances. Child support generally takes priority in Utah — if the paying spouse's income drops, courts typically preserve child support obligations before adjusting spousal support obligations.
Child support also ends when the child reaches the age of majority, which may trigger a review of alimony if the paying spouse's financial picture changes significantly during the divorce process.
User Reviews
No reviews yet. Be the first to rate this calculator!
Get alimony for your county
Alimony Calculator in states that border Utah
Key statutes: Utah Code § 75-3-719
Sources
- Utah State Courts — family court procedures and spousal support filings
- Utah Code — Legislature — alimony and spousal support statutes and guidelines
- Utah State Bar — family law attorney resources and directory
Alimony Calculator in other states
Legal professional? Learn about our tools for legal professionals
Run your Utah alimony estimate in under a minute.
Free. No signup. Reviewed by our editorial team and sourced to Utah statutes and fee schedules.
Open the calculatorLegal information, not legal advice. The Alimony Calculator for Utah produces estimates based on public fee schedules and state statutes. Actual costs vary by case. For advice about your situation, consult a licensed Utah attorney.
Related Family Law Calculators
Before filing, check court filing fees by state →