Massachusetts alimony concept: legal documents, fountain pen, reading glasses, and brass balance scales on an attorney's desk in warm light

How Alimony Works in Massachusetts: Types, Duration, and What Recent Court Rulings Changed

Massachusetts alimony concept: legal documents, fountain pen, reading glasses, and brass balance scales on an attorney's desk in warm light

Few parts of a Massachusetts divorce generate as much worry as Massachusetts alimony. People on both sides tend to arrive with the same two fears: that they will either be denied support they need, or be saddled with payments that never end. The reality sits in between, and it is more structured than most people expect. Massachusetts alimony is governed by one of the more clearly defined frameworks in the country, built on the Alimony Reform Act of 2011 and refined by court decisions since. This guide walks through how it works.

A note before we start: this article is general information, not legal advice, and every case turns on its own facts. If alimony is on the table in your situation, talk with a family law attorney before agreeing to anything.

What Massachusetts alimony is, and what it is not

Alimony is court-ordered support paid by one spouse to the other after a divorce. It is separate from child support, which is calculated under its own guidelines and serves a different purpose. Massachusetts alimony exists to address economic dependence between spouses, not the cost of raising children. In many cases both may be in play at once, and as we will see below, how the two interact has become one of the most important questions in current practice.

Alimony is not automatic. A spouse seeking it has to show economic need, and the other spouse’s ability to pay. Nor is it gender-specific. Either spouse can request it, and either can be ordered to pay.

The four types of Massachusetts alimony

The Alimony Reform Act created four distinct categories under M.G.L. c. 208, § 48. They are not interchangeable; the right one depends on the length of the marriage and the purpose the support is meant to serve.

Watch: The 4 Types of Alimony — a quick walkthrough of general term, rehabilitative, reimbursement, and transitional alimony in Massachusetts.

General term alimony is the most common, and it is what most people picture when they hear the word. It provides ongoing periodic support to a spouse who is economically dependent on the other, and it is most often awarded after longer marriages. Its duration is tied directly to how long the marriage lasted.

Rehabilitative alimony is time-limited support meant to give a spouse the runway to become self-supporting, for example by finishing a degree or re-entering the workforce after years away. It is generally capped at five years, though it can be extended in limited circumstances.

Reimbursement alimony applies to shorter marriages, typically five years or less, where one spouse made financial sacrifices to support the other’s education or career advancement. The classic example is a spouse who worked to put the other through professional school. It is non-modifiable.

Transitional alimony also applies to marriages of five years or less. It helps a spouse adjust to a new lifestyle or location following the divorce, and is limited to three years. Like reimbursement alimony, it cannot be modified.

How long general term alimony lasts

For general term alimony, the law sets maximum durations based on the length of the marriage, measured from the wedding date to the date the divorce complaint is served. Courts count actual months, not rounded years, so the difference between a marriage of nine years and eleven months and one of ten years and one month can shift the outcome by a meaningful margin.

The durational caps under M.G.L. c. 208, § 49 work like this:

  • Marriage of 5 years or less: alimony lasts no longer than 50% of the number of months married.
  • More than 5 but not more than 10 years: no longer than 60%.
  • More than 10 but not more than 15 years: no longer than 70%.
  • More than 15 but not more than 20 years: no longer than 80%.
  • More than 20 years: the court may order indefinite alimony, though it retains discretion to set a fixed end date.

These are ceilings, not starting points. A judge can order a shorter term, and can exceed the limits only with a written finding that doing so is required in the interests of justice, which in practice is uncommon.

The statute also builds in several termination triggers. General term alimony ordinarily ends when the recipient remarries or when either spouse dies. It can be suspended, reduced, or terminated if the recipient lives with another person in a common household for at least three continuous months. And it generally terminates when the paying spouse reaches full Social Security retirement age, a point the law treats as a presumptive endpoint rather than something the payor can be made to work past.

How a Massachusetts alimony amount is figured

The statute provides a guideline: alimony generally should not exceed the recipient’s need, or 30 to 35% of the difference between the spouses’ gross incomes, whichever is less. Courts look at income from all sources, including wages, investment returns, rental income, and business earnings.

In practice, that headline range tells only part of the story today. When the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated the alimony deduction for agreements executed after December 31, 2018, and Massachusetts followed for tax years beginning in 2022, the arithmetic shifted. Alimony is no longer deductible for the payer or taxable to the recipient. Because the original 30 to 35% guideline was written against the old tax treatment, many judges and practitioners now land somewhat lower in practice, often in the rough vicinity of the low-to-high twenties as a percentage of the income difference. The statute has not been rewritten to reflect this, so the gap between the written guideline and everyday practice is something to understand going in.

Beyond the income comparison, judges weigh a broader set of factors under M.G.L. c. 208, § 53: the length of the marriage, the age and health of each spouse, each party’s income and employability, the marital lifestyle, each party’s ability to maintain that lifestyle, and economic opportunities a spouse gave up because of the marriage. Courts can also impute income to a spouse who is unemployed or underemployed.

What recent court rulings changed about Massachusetts alimony

Two appellate rulings have reshaped how support is calculated in cases that also involve children, and they are worth knowing about.

The first is Cavanagh v. Cavanagh. In its 2022 decision (490 Mass. 398), the Supreme Judicial Court held that when a judge is setting both alimony and child support, the judge must run the numbers two ways — calculating alimony first, then child support first — and compare the results before issuing an order, rather than simply picking one method. A later Appeals Court decision in the same case, issued in 2025, reinforced that judges must actually perform both calculations and compare them; skipping that step is reversible error.

The second is Openshaw v. Openshaw. In its 2024 decision (493 Mass. 599), the Supreme Judicial Court expanded what counts as the “marital lifestyle” to include not just what a couple spent, but also what they consistently saved. Where regular saving was an established part of the marriage and post-divorce income is sufficient for both spouses to maintain that standard of living, that saving can be treated as part of the recipient’s need. That broadens the “need” side of the analysis in households that lived below their means.

Taken together, these rulings mean that combined alimony and child support obligations can, in some cases involving children, exceed half of a paying spouse’s gross income, a result that was unusual before. Importantly, these decisions affect the amount of support, not the durational limits, which remain unchanged. They also give judges more room to tailor outcomes to a family’s specific finances, which makes early, careful analysis more valuable than ever.

A few practical takeaways

Most Massachusetts alimony arrangements are reached through negotiation rather than imposed by a judge, which is generally good news. A negotiated agreement lets both spouses shape duration, amount, and termination triggers in ways that fit their circumstances, instead of leaving everything to the unpredictability of a courtroom.

Older orders deserve a second look, too. Alimony judgments entered before the Reform Act took effect in March 2012 are not automatically governed by the new retirement and cohabitation rules, but a paying spouse can still petition to modify them under the general “material change in circumstances” standard.

Online calculators can be a useful starting point for understanding the historical guideline, but they cannot account for the tax changes, the Cavanagh dual-calculation requirement, the Openshaw lifestyle analysis, or the dozens of fact-specific factors a court actually weighs. They are a rough estimate, not a forecast. For related reading, see our overview of the different types of divorce in Massachusetts.

How we can help with your Massachusetts alimony questions

Massachusetts alimony is one of the most fact-dependent parts of a divorce, and small differences in income structure, marriage length, or family circumstances can change the result significantly. The attorneys at Reeves Lavallee, P.C. handle family law matters throughout Worcester County and across Massachusetts, and can help you understand what alimony realistically looks like in your situation, whether you expect to pay or receive it. Contact our office to arrange a consultation.

This article is provided for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. Laws change and every case is different. For advice about your specific circumstances, consult a qualified Massachusetts family law attorney.

This article was written by a non-attorney member of the Reeves Lavallee, P.C. staff.

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