Alimony and Spousal Support are the same thing. If you're awarded custody of the children, you'll receive child support. But alimony has nothing to do with whether or not you have children.
If you are court ordered to pay alimony, losing your job does not automatically negate that order. However, it may give you grounds to go back to the court and request a modification of the order, terminating the alimony obligation. If you are in the process of a divorce and become unemployed, it is unlikely that you will be ordered to pay alimony, but not impossible.
That is dependent of circumstances, length of marriage, and the judge.
florida
His income - if he is unemployed - will be imputed at, at least, the state minimum wage - but the court will make an audit of his resources and available assets, and factor these into the alimony and support calculations.
5
if i am paying alimony in florida and move to new jersey can i stop paying alimony to my ex wife
Alimony is for spouses so if you weren't married (and Florida does not recognize common law marriage) then you're not a spouse and therefore do not qualify for alimony. You could *possibly* sue for palimony (it's like alimony, but with unmarried couples who cohabited instead of spouses), but it's rarely awarded in any state.
Florida has no fault divorce. Infidelity is not an issue.
No Florida recognize or have any type of palimony laws. Palimony is a form of alimony for couples who are not married.
Consult a divorce attorney. I'm not aware of anything that would prevent it.
Alimony? I think that applies to children.
If you're in the US, yes. Alimony is not for the support of children, it's for the support of ex-spouses. However, judges are not required to order alimony, and usually they only order it in specific circumstances.