It gives a rough estimate from the numbers you enter. It cannot assess your entitlement to spousal support.
Only a court can make the final decision on spousal support entitlement, length, and amount. Do not waive, settle, or sign anything based on this estimate. Where there are children, a low or $0 amount does not mean there is no entitlement.
A fast, automated estimate using the Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines — powered by the same calculation engine behind MySelfRep.com.
One payment of $19.99 gives you 7 days of full access — run your situation as many ways as you need.
Preliminary estimate based on the figures you entered. Real cases turn on exact dates, parenting time, each child's age and living arrangement, and other details only a full assessment captures.
We'll send a copy of your preliminary spousal support estimate and what it means for your next steps.
Unlock your full analysis — entitlement, net disposable income breakdown, child support, lump-sum, and your jurisdiction-specific family law contracts and Department of Justice approved forms — with a MySelfRep package.
Get my full results →This is not legal advice — it is a mini calculator only, and it cannot assess your entitlement to spousal support. Results use the Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines (SSAG) and are a general starting point only. The Guidelines are advisory; actual support depends on the full facts of your situation, applicable law, and judicial discretion. Only a court can make the final decision on spousal support entitlement, length, and amount. Do not waive, settle, or sign anything based on this estimate — especially where there are children, a low or $0 amount today does not mean there is no entitlement. For an accurate result and documents prepared according to local family court rules, complete a full assessment on MySelfRep.com.
This is a mini calculator estimate, not legal advice.
Only a court can decide spousal support entitlement, length, and amount. If there are children, child support comes first, and a low or $0 amount does not mean you have no claim — keep your entitlement and get a full assessment before agreeing to anything.