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State alimony comparison

New Mexico vs Texas Alimony Laws

Compare New Mexico and Texas alimony rules, formulas, duration limits, eligibility requirements, modification standards, and court discretion.
Reviewed by SettleCompass Research TeamUpdated June 2026Comparison guide
Educational content only

Recommended workflow

Compare the rules, then test the same facts in each state.

Start with the legal differences below, run one shared estimate scenario, then open each state guide for the detailed framework courts may apply.

Quick Comparison

Use this side-by-side data view as a starting point, then review the linked state law guides and calculators for deeper planning context.

FactorNew MexicoTexas
Support termspousal supportspousal maintenance
Formula profileformulalimited-cap
Property systemcommunitycommunity
Legal frameworkTemporary spousal support may be awarded while the divorce or legal separation case is pending. Final spousal support is governed by § 40-4-7 and may be structured as rehabilitative, transitional, indefinite, lump-sum, or other appropriate support.Temporary support may be awarded during the divorce proceeding under the court's equitable powers. Post-divorce spousal maintenance is governed by Chapter 8 of the Texas Family Code and is available only when specific statutory eligibility requirements are met.
Statute citationN.M. Stat. Ann. § 40-4-7; N.M. Stat. Ann. § 40-4-9Texas Family Code Chapter 8 (§§ 8.001-8.305)

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Relocation planning, negotiation prep, and state-by-state estimate checks.

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New Mexico and Texas calculators for same-fact estimates.

Remember

Support outcomes still depend on judge discretion, facts, and local procedure.

Same-facts estimate

Compare estimated support with one scenario

Use the same income and marriage facts to see how the planning estimate changes between New Mexico and Texas. This is educational, not a court prediction.

New Mexico

Advisory guideline estimate: 30% of payer gross income minus 50% of recipient gross income when there is no child support between the parties. When child support between the parties is involved, New Mexico's advisory formula is 28% of payer gross income minus 58% of recipient gross income.

Moderate

$1,333/mo

Planning range: $1,066-$1,600/mo

Duration: 10 to under 20 years

Texas

Conservative educational estimate based on minimum reasonable need and ability to pay, capped at the lesser of $5,000 per month or 20% of payer gross monthly income.

Moderate

$680/mo

Planning range: $544-$816/mo

Duration: 10 to under 20 years

Key Differences

Calculation

New Mexico: Advisory guideline estimate: 30% of payer gross income minus 50% of recipient gross income when there is no child support between the parties. When child support between the parties is involved, New Mexico's advisory formula is 28% of payer gross income minus 58% of recipient gross income. Texas: Texas is a strict limited-eligibility maintenance state. Court-ordered spousal maintenance is not automatic and is available only if the requesting spouse lacks sufficient property to meet minimum reasonable needs and satisfies a statutory eligibility ground. Texas has no formula for the actual award amount, but it has a hard statutory maximum of the lesser of $5,000 per month or 20% of payer gross monthly income.

Duration

New Mexico: New Mexico guidelines do not impose a fixed duration formula. Under the commentary, alimony is usually not appropriate for marriages under 5 years absent exceptional circumstances. For marriages of 5 to 10 years, alimony may be considered for reimbursement, rehabilitative, or transitional reasons. For marriages of 10 to 20 years, rehabilitative or transitional support is often analyzed based on marital roles, earning disparity, statutory factors, and education or vocational plans. For marriages of 20 years or more, the court retains jurisdiction over periodic spousal support unless the decree specifically provides that no support is awarded. Texas: Texas generally requires maintenance to last only for the shortest reasonable period that allows the recipient to earn enough income to meet minimum reasonable needs. Maximum duration is generally 5 years for family-violence eligibility cases or marriages of at least 10 but less than 20 years, 7 years for marriages of at least 20 but less than 30 years, and 10 years for marriages of 30 years or more. Maintenance based on the recipient's disability or care of a disabled child may continue as long as the qualifying condition continues, subject to review.

Modification

New Mexico: Periodic spousal support may generally be modified when a material and substantial change in circumstances is shown, subject to the decree terms. Lump-sum or nonmodifiable agreements may be treated differently depending on their structure. Texas: A maintenance order may be modified upon a material and substantial change in circumstances affecting either party. Any modified award remains subject to Texas statutory caps and limitations.

State Profiles

New Mexico

New Mexico uses the term spousal support and gives courts broad discretion under N.M. Stat. Ann. § 40-4-7. The statute lists financial factors for determining support and requires retained jurisdiction over periodic spousal support in marriages of 20 years or more unless the decree specifically provides otherwise. New Mexico does not use a binding statewide formula.

Eligibility: A spouse may qualify if the statutory factors support an award based on need, ability to pay, resources, income, earning capacity, and the marital standard of living. Courts consider the duration of the marriage, health, age, employment, education, property, and other financial circumstances. Eligibility is not automatic and is not based on marital misconduct.

Texas

Texas uses the term spousal maintenance for court-ordered post-divorce support and imposes some of the nation's strictest eligibility requirements. Unlike many states, support is not presumed based solely on income disparity, and a spouse must first satisfy statutory eligibility thresholds before a court considers amount and duration.

Eligibility: A spouse generally must lack sufficient property after divorce to provide for minimum reasonable needs and satisfy at least one statutory ground. Common grounds include a marriage lasting 10 years or more combined with inability to earn sufficient income, a disabling condition, caregiving responsibilities for a disabled child, or recent family violence by the other spouse. The spouse seeking maintenance bears the burden of proving eligibility.

Duration, Eligibility, and Modification

Duration Comparison

  • New Mexico: 0-5 years, 5-20 years, 20 years to retained jurisdiction or potentially indefinite
  • Texas: 0-10 years, 10-20 years, 20 years to statutory maximum duration

Eligibility Comparison

  • New Mexico: A spouse may qualify if the statutory factors support an award based on need, ability to pay, resources, income, earning capacity, and the marital standard of living. Courts consider the duration of the marriage, health, age, employment, education, property, and other financial circumstances. Eligibility is not automatic and is not based on marital misconduct.
  • Texas: A spouse generally must lack sufficient property after divorce to provide for minimum reasonable needs and satisfy at least one statutory ground. Common grounds include a marriage lasting 10 years or more combined with inability to earn sufficient income, a disabling condition, caregiving responsibilities for a disabled child, or recent family violence by the other spouse. The spouse seeking maintenance bears the burden of proving eligibility.

Modification Comparison

  • New Mexico: Periodic spousal support may generally be modified when a material and substantial change in circumstances is shown, subject to the decree terms. Lump-sum or nonmodifiable agreements may be treated differently depending on their structure.
  • Texas: A maintenance order may be modified upon a material and substantial change in circumstances affecting either party. Any modified award remains subject to Texas statutory caps and limitations.

New Mexico vs Texas Alimony FAQ

Why compare New Mexico and Texas alimony laws?+

Alimony rules vary by state. Comparing two states helps readers understand differences in formulas, duration ranges, eligibility rules, modification standards, and judicial discretion before deeper research.

Are these comparison pages legal advice?+

No. SettleCompass comparison pages are educational planning resources only and do not replace advice from a licensed family law attorney.

Can the same income produce different alimony estimates by state?+

Yes. State formulas, income caps, duration rules, statutory factors, and judge discretion can produce different outcomes from the same basic facts.

What to review next

Compare Estimates With the Calculator

Use state-specific calculator pages to model the same income and marriage-length assumptions across both states.