TX != CA
Take this with a grain of salt....it's from ChatGPT:Yes—Texas is generally considered one of the more restrictive states when it comes to court-ordered alimony (called
spousal maintenance in Texas). The reputation is largely accurate.
Why alimony is less common in Texas
Texas starts from the presumption that a divorcing spouse should become self-supporting, and courts can only award spousal maintenance in specific circumstances. A spouse usually must show both:
- They cannot meet their "minimum reasonable needs" after the divorce; and
- One of several statutory eligibility requirements applies. (TexasLawHelp.org)
Common qualifying situations include:
- The marriage lasted at least 10 years and the spouse seeking maintenance cannot earn enough to meet basic needs.
- The paying spouse committed certain family-violence offenses.
- The spouse seeking maintenance has a disability.
- The spouse is caring for a child with a disability that prevents full-time employment. (TexasLawHelp.org)
Even when maintenance is awarded, Texas typically limits both the
amount and
duration. Courts are instructed to order it for the shortest reasonable period necessary, and statutory maximum durations are generally 5, 7, or 10 years depending on the length of the marriage, with some exceptions for disability cases. (
Texas.Public.Law)
Compared with states where long-term or permanent alimony is more common, Texas courts have less discretion and stricter eligibility rules. So the perception that alimony is harder to obtain in Texas is largely true.
Child support: paycheck withholding or monthly payments?
In Texas,
income withholding from wages is the norm, not the exception.
When a child-support order is entered, the court typically issues an income withholding order directing the employer to deduct support from the paying parent's paycheck and send it through the state child-support system. This is often what people informally call "wage garnishment." (
Texas Legislature Online)
So in many cases the paying parent:
- Does not manually write a check each month.
- Sees child support automatically deducted from each paycheck.
- Receives pay stubs showing the withholding amount.
There are situations where a parent pays directly through the state's payment portal or other approved methods, but payroll withholding is extremely common and is generally the default approach. (
Texas Legislature Online)
Then it ended by saying "If you tell me how many years you were married (for example, a marriage of 5 years, 15 years, stay-at-home spouse, large income difference, children involted, etc.), I can give you a much more realistic assessment of how likely maintenance and child support would be."
F off, ChatGPT. I'm not getting divorced.