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Understanding Basics of Alimony in Utah Contrary to popular belief, getting alimony after a divorce is not an automatic process. It usually applies when one spouse earns more than the other and where financial help is necessary to balance living standards between both parties.
The Utah Courts offer an Online Court Assistance Program (OCAP) to help divorcing couples prepare divorce paperwork without an attorney. There are separate packages of forms for the spouse who initiates the divorce proceeding (the "petitioner") and the other spouse (the "respondent").
You are not legally obligated to support her. If a divorce is filed the court could make alimony retroactive.
Either spouse may ask the court for alimony. Alimony may be awarded temporarily while the case is pending or for a longer period after the divorce has been granted. The court considers the following factors when deciding whether to award alimony: The standard of living during the marriage.
Property is divided by the Utah courts during a divorce. Divorce laws in Utah state that marital property should be divided equitably. This means that a Utah court could decide that it is fair to split the marital property 50-50, or they may decide that one party deserves more than 50% of the property.
Property is divided by the Utah courts during a divorce. Divorce laws in Utah state that marital property should be divided equitably. This means that a Utah court could decide that it is fair to split the marital property 50-50, or they may decide that one party deserves more than 50% of the property.
With that said, the general rule, even for short-term marriages, is 50/50 division. However, in some very short-term marriages, the courts may put spouses back into the financial position they were in before the marriage – that is, each spouse gets the asset that belonged to him/her at the beginning of the marriage.
Utah law does not require a marriage be “long term” before a court can award alimony. Rather length of the marriage is but one of many factors the court considers in deciding whether to award alimony (and if so how long and the amount).
The court considers the following factors when deciding whether to award alimony: The standard of living during the marriage. This includes income, value of real and personal property, and any other factor that the court thinks is important for understanding how the parties lived during their marriage.