Spousal Maintenance Attorney · Conroe · Houston · Greater Houston

Spousal Maintenance Attorney — Conroe & Greater Houston, TX

Texas limits court-ordered spousal maintenance strictly under Family Code Chapter 8 — but when it applies, the amount and duration can significantly affect both parties' financial futures. Our firm represents clients in spousal maintenance matters across Conroe, Houston, and Greater Houston. Free consultation.

17+
Years Since 2008
5
Counties Served
Free
Consultation

Spousal Maintenance in Texas — Strictly Limited, Significant When It Applies

Texas applies strict limits to court-ordered spousal maintenance. Unlike many states, a Texas court cannot award maintenance simply because one spouse earns significantly more than the other, or because one spouse made career sacrifices during the marriage. Eligibility requires meeting specific statutory criteria under Texas Family Code Chapter 8, and the amount and duration are capped by law.

That said, when maintenance is available — or when spouses negotiate contractual alimony as part of a divorce settlement — the financial stakes are real. For the spouse receiving support, maintenance can materially affect post-divorce financial stability. For the spouse paying it, an unwarranted or inflated award affects income and financial planning for years. The legal strategy on both sides of a maintenance dispute matters.

Texas Family Code § 8.051 — Eligibility

A spouse is only eligible for court-ordered maintenance if they meet one of the statutory grounds: a marriage of at least ten years combined with inability to meet minimum reasonable needs; a physical or mental disability preventing self-support; custodial responsibility for a child of the marriage with a disability requiring substantial care; or the other spouse's conviction for family violence within two years of filing.

Contractual alimony — agreed to voluntarily between spouses outside the court-ordered framework — is not subject to these statutory limits. Many divorcing spouses in Texas negotiate contractual alimony as part of a comprehensive settlement, particularly in high-asset divorces where flexibility on support terms can facilitate agreement on other issues. Contractual alimony is generally governed by the terms of the parties' agreement and may involve different enforcement mechanisms than court-ordered maintenance. Whether cohabitation or remarriage terminates the obligation depends on the terms of the agreement, not the statute.


Eligibility Analysis & Strategy

Whether you are seeking maintenance you may be entitled to under Texas law or negotiating the terms of contractual alimony as part of a broader settlement, the eligibility analysis, factual development, and strategy are highly case-specific. Our firm handles spousal maintenance matters in Conroe, Houston, and across Greater Houston.

Free Consultation

Speak With a Spousal Maintenance Attorney

(713) 352-6900 Schedule Online

Spousal Support Services

  • Court-ordered maintenance claims
  • Eligibility analysis — TFC § 8.051
  • Contractual alimony negotiation
  • Spousal support defense
  • Maintenance modification
  • Enforcement of agreed support
  • Disability-based maintenance
  • Family violence maintenance claims
  • Duration & amount disputes
  • Temporary support during divorce
  • Integration with property division

Related: Uncontested Divorce

When spouses have agreed on maintenance terms along with all other issues, a flat-fee uncontested divorce may be available through 2500Divorce.com — attorney-guided from filing through final decree.

Learn about flat-fee divorce →

Our Office

141 N. San Jacinto Street
Conroe, TX 77301

Mon–Thu: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Fri: 8:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Sat–Sun: By Appointment

Get Directions →

Court-Ordered Maintenance vs. Contractual Alimony vs. Temporary Support

TFC Chapter 8
Court-Ordered Maintenance

Awarded by a judge after finding statutory eligibility under TFC § 8.051. Capped at the lesser of $5,000/month or 20% of gross monthly income under § 8.055. Duration tied to marriage length. Enforceable through contempt of court. Automatically terminates on death or remarriage under § 8.056. May be modified on material change under § 8.057.

Contractual
Contractual Alimony

Voluntarily agreed to by both spouses as part of the divorce settlement and incorporated into the final decree. Not subject to the § 8.055 caps or statutory duration limits. Governed by the terms of the parties' agreement. Enforcement mechanisms may differ from court-ordered maintenance. Termination on remarriage or cohabitation depends on the agreement's terms, not the statute.

Pendente Lite
Temporary Support

Ordered during the pendency of a divorce proceeding to maintain the financial status quo. Available under TFC § 6.502 as part of temporary orders. Separate from the final maintenance determination and ends when the divorce is finalized. Particularly important when one spouse controls most of the marital income or liquid assets during the proceeding.

Who Qualifies for Court-Ordered Maintenance in Texas?

TFC § 8.051(2)(B)

10-Year Marriage + Insufficient Resources

The marriage lasted at least ten years and the spouse seeking maintenance lacks sufficient property to meet minimum reasonable needs and cannot support themselves through employment due to a physical or mental disability, because they are the primary caregiver for a young child of the marriage, or because they lack earning ability in the labor market sufficient to provide for minimum reasonable needs.

TFC § 8.051(1)

Family Violence Conviction

The paying spouse was convicted of or received deferred adjudication for a family violence offense against the other spouse or a member of the household, and the offense occurred within two years before the divorce was filed or while the divorce was pending. This basis applies regardless of the length of the marriage.

TFC § 8.051(2)(A)

Physical or Mental Disability

The spouse seeking maintenance has an incapacitating physical or mental disability that prevents them from earning sufficient income to meet their minimum reasonable needs — regardless of the length of the marriage. Maintenance based on disability may continue as long as the disabling condition persists, without the duration caps that apply under other grounds.

TFC § 8.051(2)(C)

Custodian of Child with Disability

The spouse seeking maintenance is the primary caregiver of a child of the marriage — regardless of age — who has a physical or mental disability requiring substantial care and personal supervision, and that caregiving responsibility prevents the spouse from earning sufficient income to meet minimum reasonable needs.

How Courts Determine the Amount and Duration of Maintenance

Once eligibility is established, the court does not simply award the statutory maximum. Under Texas Family Code § 8.052, courts must consider a range of factors in determining the nature, amount, duration, and manner of periodic payments. These factors make maintenance determinations highly fact-specific — and the quality of the factual record built on each factor directly affects the outcome.

The statutory cap under § 8.055 sets the ceiling, but the court's discretion on the amount within that ceiling — and the duration up to the statutory maximum — is shaped by how the § 8.052 factors are presented and weighed.

Texas courts have significant discretion in maintenance determinations. The Texas Supreme Court in Tenery v. Tenery, 932 S.W.2d 29 (Tex. 1996) confirmed that the trial court's maintenance determination will not be disturbed on appeal absent a clear abuse of discretion — which underscores the importance of building a complete and persuasive factual record at the trial level.

Financial Resources Each spouse's financial resources, including separate and community property and liabilities divided in the divorce.
Education & Employment Skills The education, employment history, and earning ability of the requesting spouse — and time needed to acquire sufficient skills.
Duration of the Marriage Longer marriages generally support more substantial maintenance awards within the statutory duration caps.
Age & Physical Condition The age, employment history, earning ability, and physical and emotional condition of the requesting spouse.
Homemaker Contributions Contributions to the marriage as a homemaker — including time spent raising children or supporting the other spouse's career.
Fault in the Breakdown Fault in the breakdown of the marriage — including adultery, cruelty, or waste — is a statutory factor under § 8.052.
History of Family Violence Any history of family violence by either party in the marriage is considered in the maintenance determination.
Waste of Marital Assets Deceptive or wasteful acts by either spouse that diminished available marital assets are weighed against the offending party.

Modification & Termination

Under TFC § 8.057, court-ordered maintenance may be modified or terminated on a material and substantial change in circumstances of either party. Under § 8.056, maintenance automatically terminates on the death of either party or the remarriage of the recipient, and may be terminated if the recipient cohabitates with another person in a romantic relationship on a continuing basis.

Contractual alimony follows its own agreed terms — automatic termination on remarriage or cohabitation only applies if the agreement expressly says so.

Our Office

141 N. San Jacinto Street
Conroe, TX 77301

Mon–Thu: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Fri: 8:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Sat–Sun: By Appointment

Get Directions →

Spousal Maintenance Representation in Conroe, Houston & Greater Houston

Our firm handles spousal maintenance and contractual alimony matters throughout the Greater Houston area — including Conroe, The Woodlands, Spring, Tomball, Magnolia, Willis, and Montgomery in Montgomery County, and Houston, Cypress, Humble, Kingwood, Katy, Sugar Land, and Pearland in Harris County. We also serve clients in Fort Bend County, Brazoria County, and Waller County. Free consultations are available by phone or online.

Spousal Maintenance FAQ — Texas

Texas calls it spousal maintenance rather than alimony, and applies strict limits to court-ordered support. Court-ordered maintenance under Texas Family Code Chapter 8 requires meeting specific statutory eligibility criteria — most commonly a marriage of at least ten years and the inability to meet minimum reasonable needs. The amount and duration are capped by statute. Spouses may also agree to contractual alimony, which is not subject to these caps and may involve different enforcement mechanisms than court-ordered maintenance.
Under Texas Family Code § 8.051, a spouse is eligible for court-ordered maintenance if one of four grounds is met: (1) the marriage lasted at least ten years and the spouse seeking support lacks sufficient property and earning ability to meet minimum reasonable needs; (2) the spouse has a physical or mental disability that prevents self-support; (3) the spouse is the primary caregiver of a child of the marriage with a disability requiring substantial care; or (4) the other spouse was convicted of family violence within two years of the divorce filing. Each ground has its own specific requirements — eligibility is not presumed and must be established with evidence.
Under Texas Family Code § 8.055, court-ordered maintenance is capped at the lesser of $5,000 per month or 20% of the paying spouse's average gross monthly income. Duration is also capped: up to 5 years for marriages of 10 to 20 years; up to 7 years for 20 to 30 year marriages; up to 10 years for marriages of 30 or more years. Maintenance awarded on the basis of disability may continue as long as the disabling condition exists. Contractual alimony is not subject to any of these caps — amount and duration are whatever the parties negotiate.
Under Texas Family Code § 8.052, courts consider: each spouse's financial resources and property allocated in the divorce; the education and employment skills of the requesting spouse; the duration of the marriage; the requesting spouse's age, employment history, earning ability, and physical and emotional condition; the effect of child custody on earning ability; contributions as a homemaker; any fault in the breakdown of the marriage; any history of family violence; and any deceptive or wasteful acts that diminished marital assets. The Texas Supreme Court in Tenery v. Tenery, 932 S.W.2d 29 (Tex. 1996), confirmed that trial courts have broad discretion in weighing these factors — which makes the quality of the factual record built at the trial level critical.

Court-ordered maintenance under Texas Family Code Chapter 8 is awarded by a judge after finding statutory eligibility. It is subject to the $5,000/20% monthly cap and duration limits, and enforceable through contempt of court — including potential incarceration for willful nonpayment. It terminates automatically on death or remarriage under § 8.056.

Contractual alimony is a voluntary agreement between spouses incorporated into the divorce decree. It is not subject to the statutory caps. Contractual alimony is governed by the terms of the agreement and may involve different enforcement mechanisms. It does not automatically terminate on remarriage or cohabitation unless the agreement expressly provides for it.

Under Texas Family Code § 8.057, court-ordered maintenance may be modified or terminated on a showing of material and substantial change in circumstances of either party — such as a significant change in income, a new disability, or a change in the custodial arrangement. Under § 8.056, maintenance automatically terminates on the death of either spouse or the remarriage of the recipient, and may be terminated if the recipient cohabitates with another person in a romantic relationship on a continuing basis. Contractual alimony terminates only according to its agreed terms.
Yes. Texas Family Code § 8.052 expressly lists fault in the breakdown of the marriage as a factor courts consider when determining the nature, amount, duration, and manner of maintenance. A spouse whose adultery, cruelty, or waste of marital assets contributed to the breakdown may receive less maintenance if seeking it, or may be ordered to pay more if opposing it. Fault must be pleaded and supported by evidence — it is not automatically considered.
These terms are often used interchangeably but have technical distinctions in Texas. Spousal maintenance is the statutory term used in Texas Family Code Chapter 8 for court-ordered periodic payments after divorce — the only form of post-divorce support a court can order without the parties' agreement. Spousal support sometimes refers colloquially to the same concept, or more precisely to temporary support ordered during a pending divorce proceeding under TFC § 6.502. Alimony is a general term from other states' law — Texas does not use it in the Family Code, but contractual alimony refers to voluntary agreements between spouses that operate outside the Chapter 8 framework and are not subject to its caps or duration limits.
Yes. Our firm handles spousal maintenance matters in Montgomery County courts for clients in Conroe, The Woodlands, Spring, Tomball, Magnolia, and Willis, and in Harris County courts for Houston-area clients including Cypress, Humble, and Kingwood. We also handle cases in Fort Bend, Brazoria, and Waller Counties. Free consultations are available by phone or online.
Free Consultation

Questions About Spousal Support in Texas? Let's Talk.

Serving Conroe, Houston, and Greater Houston. Consultations are free and confidential.

(713) 352-6900 Schedule Your Free Consultation
Where We Practice

Serving Greater Houston & Surrounding Counties

This firm represents clients throughout Montgomery, Harris, Fort Bend, Brazoria, and Waller Counties — with our office based in Conroe, steps from the Montgomery County Family Law Courts.

We serve all of Texas for uncontested divorce through 2500Divorce.com — and handle family law and personal injury matters throughout Montgomery, Harris, Fort Bend, Brazoria, and Waller Counties. Not sure if we serve your area? Call us.
Free Consultation →
Ready to speak with an attorney? Free consultation — no obligation. Montgomery County & Greater Houston.

Copyright © Fritz and Phillips, PC  ·  All Rights Reserved

Attorney advertising. Fritz and Phillips, PC is a Texas law firm. The information on this website is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or establish an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Jessica Fritz (TX Bar 2008) and Keith Phillips (TX Bar 2016) are the attorneys responsible for this content.