Connecticut does not use an official alimony calculator. Most couples set support by agreement after exchanging budgets and current income information, often with help from mediation. If you can’t agree and you litigate, a judge may award support based on need, ability to pay, marriage length, health, work history, and overall fairness.
If the state ever publishes a formal calculator, add a trusted link here. As of now, there is no state-mandated formula.
Use this negotiation tool while you gather documents:
Temporary estimate = 40% of the higher earner’s net monthly income minus 50% of the lower earner’s net monthly income.
Example: One spouse nets 8,000 dollars per month and the other nets 4,500 dollars. Forty percent of 8,000 is 3,200. Fifty percent of 4,500 is 2,250. The difference is 950 dollars per month as a discussion starting point. This is not the law. Adjust for child support, health insurance, unusual debts, or short-term career steps like licensing or training.
Temporary support during the case
Short-term help to stabilize both households while you exchange information and negotiate.
Rehabilitative or transitional support
Time-limited support tied to a plan to reenter the workforce or rebuild earnings; often includes a check-in date.
Durational or longer-term support
Less common, but possible by agreement after longer marriages with a significant income gap or health limits; many couples add step-downs or an end date.
Lump-sum or buyout support
A one-time payment or scheduled installments that replace monthly alimony and reduce ongoing contact.
Spousal support smooths the transition from one household to two. It helps with ordinary living costs while a spouse rebuilds income or adjusts to a sustainable budget. It is not punishment, a duplicate of child support, or a way to maintain luxury spending neither spouse can sustain. Durable agreements connect support to a simple plan—resume updates, job search milestones, credentialing steps, or a refinance timeline.
Tax note: For most divorces finalized after 2018, alimony is not deductible to the payer and not taxable to the recipient under federal law. Confirm your personal tax treatment with a professional.
Monthly payments with scheduled step-downs
A lump-sum buyout at judgment or in staged installments
Property or account offsets instead of monthly alimony
Targeted expense payments such as health-insurance premiums or a portion of the mortgage
A hybrid plan that blends a smaller monthly amount with a partial buyout, plus life-insurance security for a defined term
Hello Divorce can prepare all your Connecticut divorce forms for you with our divorce plans—and we can help you calculate or negotiate support with our mediators and financial pros. We turn budgets into clear numbers, pressure-test proposals with the temporary estimator, and draft clean, enforceable terms with step-downs, buyouts, or expense-based structures that fit real life.
Is there a calculator for Connecticut alimony?
No official calculator. Most couples negotiate a fair number using budgets, income, and a short-term estimator to guide talks.
How long does support last?
As long as you agree. Many plans run for a set term with step-downs or a review date; longer terms are less common but possible by agreement.
Can we do a buyout instead of monthly payments?
Yes. A lump-sum or staged buyout can replace monthly alimony and simplify finances.
Can support be modified later?
You can draft your agreement to allow or bar modifications. Many couples permit changes for major, documented shifts in income or health.
How does child support interact with alimony?
Child support comes first. Model the combined picture—child support, premiums, and major kid expenses—before finalizing alimony.