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Spousal Support New York

Thanks for visiting Federal Lawyers – managed by our lead attorney, a second-generation law firm with over 40 years of combined experience in New York matrimonial law. Spousal support (called maintenance here, alimony elsewhere) means one spouse pays the other money during and after divorce. It’s not child support – that’s separate. The idea is to compensate for economic disparities between spouses so both can maintain reasonably comparable standards of living post-divorce. In theory it’s gender-neutral. In practice it usually means husbands paying wives, though that’s changing.

New York uses a formula to calculate support – caps at $203,000 of the payor’s income, plugs in both spouses’ earnings, produces a dollar amount. Sounds objective. Except judges deviate constantly, parties manipulate income figures to game the calculation, and the formula doesn’t account for second families, new partners’ incomes, or cost-of-living variations. At Federal Lawyers – we know the formula is a starting point, not an answer.

The Formula Creates False Precision

Domestic Relations Law 236(B)(6) sets the formula. For the higher-earning spouse (payor), take 30% of their income up to $203,000, subtract 20% of the lower-earning spouse’s (payee’s) income. That’s guideline amount #1. Guideline amount #2: take 40% of combined income up to $406,000, subtract payee’s income. Court awards the lower of the two.

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This produces a number, but that number assumes both spouses live in similar circumstances, have no other dependents, and earn exactly what they report. Income manipulation happens constantly. Payor wants to show lower income – they defer bonuses, take compensation as non-taxable benefits, have their business pay personal expenses so reported income stays low. Payee wants to show lower income to maximize what they receive – works part-time when capable of full-time employment, declines higher-paying jobs, claims health issues prevent earning more. Courts impute income when spouses voluntarily suppress earnings, but proving voluntary underemployment requires evidence the other spouse often can’t obtain.

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The $203,000 cap means high earners pay based on only a portion of their income. If payor earns $500,000 and payee earns $50,000, formula calculates based on $203,000 and $50,000, ignoring the additional $297,000. Courts can award additional amounts above the guideline, but there’s no formula for that – pure judicial discretion, reintroducing the unpredictability the formula was supposed to eliminate.

Duration Depends on Marriage Length

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Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
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