Judicial discretion state

South Carolina Alimony Calculator

Estimate spousal support (maintenance) amount and duration in South Carolina. Updated for 2026.

Last reviewed July 2026 · Free · Nothing you enter is stored

$0
estimated monthly spousal support ·
Educational estimate, not legal advice. Alimony in South Carolina is discretionary — actual awards vary widely by judge and circumstances.
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How alimony works in South Carolina

South Carolina does not use a fixed statutory formula for alimony amounts. Judges weigh statutory factors — length of the marriage, each spouse's income and earning capacity, age and health, standard of living, and contributions to the marriage. Our calculator uses the AAML guideline formula (30% of payor's income minus 20% of recipient's) that attorneys commonly use for ballpark estimates.

Governing law: S.C. Code Ann. § 20-3-130 — Discretionary under thirteen factors; alimony is barred to a spouse who commits adultery before the earlier of a signed settlement agreement or a permanent separation order.

Frequently asked questions

How is alimony calculated in South Carolina?

South Carolina does not use a fixed statutory formula for alimony amounts. Judges weigh statutory factors — length of the marriage, each spouse's income and earning capacity, age and health, standard of living, and contributions to the marriage. Our calculator uses the AAML guideline formula (30% of payor's income minus 20% of recipient's) that attorneys commonly use for ballpark estimates. See S.C. Code Ann. § 20-3-130.

How long does alimony last in South Carolina?

Duration is generally tied to the length of the marriage. Short marriages (under ~5 years) typically produce short-term or no support; long marriages (20+ years) can produce long-term support. South Carolina courts set duration case-by-case.

What types of alimony does South Carolina recognize?

South Carolina recognizes: periodic, lump-sum, rehabilitative, reimbursement, separate maintenance. Discretionary under thirteen factors; alimony is barred to a spouse who commits adultery before the earlier of a signed settlement agreement or a permanent separation order.

Is alimony taxable in South Carolina?

For divorces finalized after 2018, federal law (TCJA) makes alimony non-deductible for the payer and non-taxable for the recipient. A few states differ for state income tax — confirm with a tax professional.

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