Alabama law
Family Laws in Alabama.
Alabama recognizes both no-fault (incompatibility, irretrievable breakdown) and fault-based divorce grounds. The state uses equitable distribution for property division. Alabama reformed its alimony laws in 2018, making rehabilitative alimony the preferred type and limiting periodic alimony to the length of the marriage (with a 20-year exception). Alabama enacted a rebuttable presumption of joint custody effective January 1, 2026 (House Bill 229).
Last verified: 2026-02-25
State law
Statute of Limitations
There is no statute of limitations for filing for divorce. Alabama recognizes both no-fault grounds (incompatibility, irretrievable breakdown) and 10 fault-based grounds including adultery, abandonment, imprisonment, and domestic violence.
State law
Filing Requirements
If filing against a non-resident spouse, the plaintiff must be a bona fide Alabama resident for at least 6 months. If both parties are Alabama residents, no minimum residency is specified.
30 days from filing before a final decree can be issued.
Filing fees vary by county circuit court, typically $200-$350.
State law
Key Alabama Statutes
Rehabilitative alimony is the preferred type, limited to 5 years maximum absent extraordinary circumstances. Periodic alimony is only awarded when rehabilitation is not feasible, limited to the length of the marriage. Exception: marriages of 20+ years have no time limit. Alimony terminates on death of either party or remarriage of recipient.
Alabama divides marital property equitably (not necessarily 50/50). The court has broad discretion, considering length of marriage, contributions, age, health, earning capacity, and conduct of the parties.
Establishes a rebuttable presumption favoring joint custody. A parent may rebut the presumption by showing joint custody would harm or is impractical for the child. This is the most significant change to Alabama custody law in nearly two decades.
Uses the income shares model. Both parents' gross incomes are considered, along with time with the child, healthcare/insurance costs, and childcare. A 150% multiplier applies for court-ordered 50% shared custody arrangements (2023 amendment).
State law
Official Sources
Not Legal Advice
This page summarizes publicly available statutes and rules for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created by viewing this content. Laws change — always verify with the primary source or consult a licensed attorney in Alabama.
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