Massachusetts Alimony Laws: How Long It Lasts and How Much You Can Expect

Massachusetts alimony laws set specific limits on how long support lasts and how much a spouse can receive, and courts can modify existing orders when financial circumstances change.

Key Takeaways:

  • Massachusetts uses four types of alimony (general term, rehabilitative, reimbursement, and transitional), each with different rules on duration and purpose.
  • Alimony amounts cannot exceed the recipient’s need or 30-35% of the difference between both spouses’ gross incomes – but as of 2026, in practice, this percentage has been reduced to account for tax law changes in 2019.
  • Existing alimony orders can be modified or terminated when there is a material change in circumstances, including remarriage or cohabitation.

Alimony is one of the most misunderstood parts of divorce. People either assume they’ll automatically receive it, or they panic at the thought of paying it indefinitely. In Massachusetts, the reality is more nuanced and structured than most people expect.

Massachusetts has some of the most clearly defined alimony laws in the country, thanks to the Alimony Reform Act of 2011. That legislation overhauled how courts award spousal support, introducing firm guidelines around duration and amount that simply didn’t exist before. If you’re going through a divorce and alimony is on the table, understanding how the system actually works gives you a real advantage when it comes to negotiating or litigating your case.

The Four Types of Alimony in Massachusetts

Not all alimony serves the same purpose, and Massachusetts law recognizes that. There are four distinct types, and the type awarded matters enormously for how long payments last and under what conditions they end.

  • General Term Alimony is the most common. It provides regular support to a spouse who is financially dependent on the other and is typically awarded in longer marriages. The duration is tied directly to the length of the marriage.
  • Rehabilitative Alimony is designed for a spouse who needs time and resources to become financially independent. Think of someone who stepped away from their career to raise children and now needs to re-enter the workforce. This type has a defined end date and is meant to bridge the gap, not provide indefinite support.
  • Reimbursement Alimony applies in shorter marriages, typically under five years, where one spouse made significant financial sacrifices to support the other’s education or career advancement. For example, if one spouse worked full-time to put the other through medical school, reimbursement alimony acknowledges that contribution.
  • Transitional Alimony also applies to shorter marriages and helps a spouse adjust to a new lifestyle or location following the divorce. It’s time-limited and purpose-specific.

How Long Does Alimony Last in Massachusetts?

For general term alimony, Massachusetts law sets hard caps based on the length of the marriage:

  • Marriages up to 5 years: alimony lasts no longer than 50% of the number of months married
  • Marriages of 5 to 10 years: no longer than 60% of the months married
  • Marriages of 10 to 15 years: no longer than 70% of the months married
  • Marriages of 15 to 20 years: no longer than 80% of the months married
  • Marriages over 20 years: the court has discretion to order alimony for an indefinite term

These caps create predictability for both the paying spouse and the recipient. That said, courts can deviate from these guidelines in cases involving chronic illness, disability, or other exceptional circumstances.

General term alimony also automatically terminates when the recipient spouse remarries, or when either spouse reaches full Social Security retirement age – currently 67 for most people.

How Much Alimony Can a Massachusetts Court Award?

Massachusetts law caps alimony at the recipient’s demonstrated financial need or 30-35% of the difference between both spouses’ gross incomes, whichever is less. Although these percentage numbers are still technically law, MA Courts had to adjust in 2019, when tax laws changed to make alimony non-taxable and non-tax-deductible. The result is that, as of 2026, many judges and practitioners are using roughly 22-28% as a range. Courts look at both spouses’ income from all sources, including wages, investment returns, rental income, and business earnings.

Beyond the income calculation, judges weigh a broader set of factors when determining the actual amount:

  • The length of the marriage
  • Each spouse’s age and health
  • Each spouse’s employability and earning capacity
  • The marital lifestyle and standard of living
  • Each spouse’s economic and non-economic contributions to the marriage
  • Lost economic opportunity as a result of the marriage (for example, a spouse who left a career to raise children)

No two alimony awards look exactly alike, because no two marriages are identical. A spouse who earned $250,000 annually while the other spouse stayed home will face a very different analysis than a marriage in which both spouses held comparable jobs throughout.

When Can Alimony Be Modified or Terminated?

Alimony orders are not necessarily permanent, even when they’re structured as long-term awards. Massachusetts courts can modify or terminate alimony when there is a material change in circumstances (something significant has changed since the original order was entered).

Common grounds for modification include:

  • A significant increase or decrease in either spouse’s income
  • The recipient spouse remarrying (this triggers automatic termination for general term alimony)
  • The recipient spouse is cohabitating with a romantic partner for at least three months (however, judges look at the totality of the living situation)
  • Retirement of the paying spouse upon reaching full Social Security retirement age
  • A serious health change affecting either party’s financial situation

The cohabitation provision is worth highlighting because it surprises a lot of people. Under Massachusetts law, if the recipient spouse is living with a new partner, i.e., sharing expenses, a household, or financial resources, the paying spouse can petition the court to reduce or terminate alimony entirely (the cohabitation does not have to involve marriage).

Modification requires filing a complaint for modification with the Probate and Family Court. The burden falls on the person requesting the change to demonstrate that the material change in circumstances justifies a new order. Courts do not automatically revisit alimony; someone has to bring the case.

Pre-Reform Orders: A Different Set of Rules

One important nuance: alimony orders entered before March 1, 2012 ( before the Alimony Reform Act took effect) are not automatically subject to the new retirement and cohabitation rules. However, paying spouses can petition the court to modify those older orders based on the default “material change in circumstance” standard, even if the order predates the reform. 

For a detailed breakdown of how Massachusetts courts calculate income and apply these guidelines, the Massachusetts Probate and Family Court publishes resources that walk through the process.

Alimony Is Negotiable, but the Stakes Are High

Most alimony agreements in Massachusetts are reached through negotiation, not a judge’s ruling. That’s actually good news, because it means both spouses have real input into the outcome. A negotiated agreement can address duration, amount, and termination triggers in ways that work for both parties – and avoid the unpredictability of leaving those decisions entirely to the court.

That said, what you agree to now follows you for years. An alimony agreement that looks manageable today can become a serious financial burden as circumstances change. Getting the details right from the beginning is essential.

How Farias Family Law Approach Alimony Challenges in Massachusetts Divorce Cases

At Farias Family Law, our team approaches alimony with the same philosophy we bring to every aspect of divorce: strategy, transparency, and a genuine focus on your long-term financial stability. Whether you’re concerned about paying more than you should or making sure you receive what you’re entitled to, we build our approach around your specific financial picture, not a generic formula.

With 35 years of combined experience handling alimony, divorce, and modifications of existing orders across Massachusetts, we know how to negotiate agreements that hold up and how to pursue modification when life circumstances shift.

If alimony is a factor in your divorce, or if you have an existing order that no longer reflects your reality, schedule an assessment with our team so we can look at the full picture together and build a plan for securing the best possible outcome. 

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