At a certain point, the topic has to be dealt with.
The only way to do it successfully is to arm yourself with as much knowledge as possible.
By Jeremy Brown July 19 2018, 7:33 PM
Fatherly.com
Second only to child custody, alimony is one of the most contentious and difficult-to-navigate processes in any divorce. When two people are splitting up, particularly when that split is acrimonious, the last thing either of them wants to discuss is the prospect of giving money to each other. But, the topic has to be dealt with and the only way to do it successfully is to go in armed with as much knowledge as possible.
âAlimony is one of the very last pieces to fall into place,â says Lili Vasileff founder and President of Wealth Protection Management and of Divorce and Money Matters LLC and the author of Money & Divorce: The Essential Roadmap To Mastering Financial Decisions. âEverything else happens and thatâs the last piece of the puzzle that completes the whole picture and itâs usually the most complicated and complex because itâs interdependent on so many other things.â
It helps, adds Vasileff, to really go into this with realistic expectations because, by the time youâre negotiating alimony, you should have a very good idea of what all the other elements are as you close out this deal. Vasileff, who has decades of experience walking clients through alimony, offered these best practice tips for negotiating alimony.
Know Your Finances
One of the most important things, per Vasileff, to know when entering into alimony negotiations is what it actually costs for you to live â to understand what you can get by on, what you canât live without, and what youâd love to have. By knowing that range, she says, you can negotiate from a better place of understanding in terms of what you might be accepting or even giving up.
Additionally, she says to have an idea of your own earning capacity. âOften Iâm working with individuals who are perhaps out of the workforce permanently or temporarily or not fully employed and thereâs a fear factor in not knowing what youâre able to attract in terms of your own capabilities,â she says. âAnd itâs really a great time to at least think about it and plan of how you need to be financially independent more or less at some point in your own life and what does that mean?â
Study the Law
Take the time to learn all of the ins and outs of the laws in your state and how they apply to alimony payments. There are many different types of alimony out there and doing the research as to what you can realistically ask for in your state will not only help you build your case but also help you manage expectations. âIf youâre expecting lifetime alimony and, letâs just say thereâs a rule of thumb that itâs half the length of your marriage,â says Vasileff, âyou could be in for a really bad surprise and be unable to negotiate without that kind of knowledge.â
Make a Budget
Youâre going to be paying retainers and attorney fees, so make sure that you actually have the resources available to make those payments on time. âAttorneys are not sympathetic and do not work for free often,â Vasileff says. Additionally, as you begin preparations for your divorce, make sure you figure out a budget. Itâs an expensive process and going into it without a plan can set you up for a problem down the line. âEverybody plans for weddings or a bar mitzvah or a cruise,â Vasileff says. âVery few people budget for a divorce and you need to understand that there is a cost to divorce and it helps to think about it ahead of time so that youâre not taken by surprise and unprepared.â
Manage Your Expectations
While every state has uniform guidelines for child support, very few states have such guidelines when it comes to alimony. âItâs very discretionary,â Vasileff says. âItâs weighted by certain factors and the factors are enumerated in case law and in legal statutes. But how you apply those factors results in very different outcomes.â
An example from Vasileff: âLetâs be happy and say we have $20 million and weâre going to divide $20 million between the two of us. I could probably live off of the interest on $10 million, which then kind of impacts what kind of alimony I receive because itâs taken into consideration. However, if we have $100,000 in debt, no savings and weâre paycheck people, alimony becomes even more critical as an element in this calculation. Itâs case specific.â
Plan For Contingencies
âIf youâre dependent for the moment on your other spouse supporting you, you need to make sure that youâve planned for contingencies, that you have an emergency fund in case something happens and you donât receive support for that month or six months or if he or she falls off the face of the earth,â says Vasileff. You also want to make sure that their obligations to you are secured in case they die or something unforeseen happens. Vasileff stresses that itâs important to protect yourself against any unwanted surprises.
Think Twice Before Waiving Alimony
In some divorce cases, one party may choose to waive alimony, figuring that theyâre earning enough on their own that they donât need anything from their ex to get by. However, Vasileff suggests that keeping the door open slightly, even with a small amount like a dollar year, allows for renegotiation if something catastrophic happens. âIf you have waived alimony, it is waived forever,â she notes. âThe door has closed and you can never go back for support under any circumstances. So waiving alimony is a huge deal. There are reasons to waive alimony, but for the average person whoâs on a paycheck, I would think twice about it.â
Donât Agree to Anything Out of Court
Once the alimony is finalized in a judgment, one party cannot change it unilaterally and decide that, for example, theyâre now only going to pay once every other month. A decision like that can only be made by going back to court. However, some couples might come to some kind of a handshake agreement and allow one partner to skip a payment here and there. This is something Vasileff advises against because of the slippery slope it leads to. âWhat if it becomes routine behavior?â she asks. ââThis month I donât want to pay you but Iâll pay you in three months as a catchup.â And then in three months they go on a vacation while youâre waiting for your check. Once you start to slip and allow that and enable it, itâs much harder to enforce.â
Keep Emotion Out of It
The notion of taking someone for âeverything theyâve gotâ in court has become a cliche in divorce-related conversations, but the truth is, you donât want to approach an alimony negotiation with anything like malice or greed, as itâs only going to fuel more negativity. âYouâre telling me youâre going to go after everything I have and go for my jugular. What do you think Iâm going to do?â Vasileff says. âIâm going to strike back. You need to come back to, âHow does this transaction get executed and whatâs in my best interests to make that happen?ââ
Do Your Homework
Even if you think youâve read everything there is about alimony, read more, and then read it again. The better prepared you are, the less likely you are to be tripped up by something unexpected. âPreparation is the best defense you can possibly have. Because managing expectations will save you money, itâs going to save you in legal costs, therapy costs, everything. And it sets the tone for you to understand that itâs a process. Itâs not a sprint. Itâs going to be a marathon. And youâre going to have to last and preserve your energy at different points in time.â

