Many North Carolina couples negotiate support in mediation and submit agreed terms for approval. If litigated, the court can order postseparation support (temporary) and/or alimony (longer-term).
There is no official statewide calculator for postseparation support or alimony in North Carolina. Judges consider need and ability to pay, marital standard of living, length of marriage, ages/health, earning capacity, and—uniquely—marital misconduct can affect alimony outcomes.
Temporary estimate = 40% of the higher earner’s net monthly income minus 50% of the lower earner’s net monthly income.
This is a negotiation tool, not law. Example: If net incomes are $7,500 and $3,000, 40% of $7,500 ($3,000) minus 50% of $3,000 ($1,500) suggests $1,500 per month. Adjust for insurance shifts, childcare, major debt, or seasonal income.
Postseparation support stabilizes cash flow while the case is pending. Alimony may be rehabilitative/transitional or durational/longer-term depending on facts. Parties can also agree to a lump-sum/buyout or property/account offsets.
Support is transition help as two households are established. It is not punishment and does not duplicate child support, which is calculated separately for children’s needs.
Use monthly payments with step-downs tied to milestones (training completion, new role), a lump-sum buyout, retirement/property offsets, or targeted expense payments (COBRA, tuition, rent). Many couples secure support with term life insurance naming the recipient as beneficiary for the support term.
Hello Divorce can prepare all your North Carolina divorce forms for you with our divorce plans.
Hello Divorce can help you calculate or negotiate support with our mediators and financial pros.
Is there an official alimony calculator in North Carolina?
No. North Carolina has no mandated calculator; courts consider need, ability to pay, and other factors, and may weigh marital misconduct.
How long does alimony last in North Carolina?
It depends on your agreement or order. Rehabilitative and durational terms are common; the specifics reflect marriage length, budgets, and paths to self-support.
Can support be modified?
Often yes—if permitted by your order and there is a substantial change in circumstances. Parties can agree to non-modifiable terms.