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Spousal Support Attorneys in Las Vegas

Spousal Support in Nevada

Divorce takes time, and bills do not pause while a Nevada court works through your case. Spousal support, sometimes called temporary maintenance or pendente lite support, is the financial support one spouse can be ordered to pay the other during the divorce process. It is meant to keep both parties roughly stable until a judge enters a final decree.

Ford Law represents clients on both sides of a spousal support fight, those who need support to keep the lights on while the case moves forward and those defending against unreasonable temporary support requests. Whether you are preparing to file in Las Vegas, Henderson, or anywhere else in Clark County, we can help you understand what a court is likely to order and what evidence will move that number up or down.

How Spousal Support Differs From Alimony

Although the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, Ford Law treats them as two stages of the same financial conversation:

  • Spousal support is paid during the divorce, often by court order on a motion for temporary support. It exists to maintain the status quo and prevent one spouse from being financially squeezed before the case is decided.
  • Alimony is the post-divorce support a Nevada court may order in the final decree. It can be rehabilitative, periodic, or in some cases permanent.

Both are governed by Nevada law, both are heavily influenced by the same income and lifestyle evidence, and both can be challenged with the right experts and strategy. If you came here looking for information on post-divorce alimony, see our Alimony page.

How Temporary Spousal Support Works in Nevada

In a Clark County divorce, either spouse can request temporary spousal support through a motion early in the case, often filed at the same time as the divorce complaint or shortly after. The court will typically set a hearing, accept financial disclosures, and decide whether to order temporary support and how much.

Nevada family courts have broad discretion when setting temporary support. Judges look at the requesting spouse’s reasonable need, the other spouse’s ability to pay, the standard of living during the marriage, and any access each spouse has to community accounts and credit. There is no rigid formula. The numbers can vary widely from case to case, even where the underlying incomes look similar.

What Goes Into a Temporary Spousal Support Decision

Nevada judges weigh a number of factors when deciding whether to order temporary support and how much:

  • Each spouse’s income from all sources, including wages, self-employment income, distributions, dividends, and bonuses
  • Each spouse’s earning capacity, especially where one spouse has been out of the workforce or under-earning
  • The standard of living established during the marriage
  • Reasonable monthly expenses, including housing, debt service, healthcare, and child-related costs
  • Access to community accounts, credit, and liquid assets during the divorce
  • Length of the marriage
  • Health, age, and ability to work of each spouse
  • Tax implications of the proposed support
  • Any temporary order on the marital home, vehicles, or shared expenses
Working With Experts: Vocational, Lifestyle, and Medical

Spousal support cases often turn on what each spouse can earn and what they actually need. When the numbers are contested, Ford Law works with court-recognized experts to put rigorous evidence in front of the judge:

  • Vocational experts can evaluate a spouse’s education, work history, and the local job market to estimate realistic earning capacity. This is especially important when one spouse has been out of the workforce, has self-employment income that is hard to verify, or claims an inability to work.
  • Lifestyle experts and forensic accountants can document the standard of living during the marriage by analyzing bank records, credit cards, and spending patterns. This evidence is powerful when one spouse is downplaying past spending to lower a support award, or inflating it to raise one.
  • Medical experts can speak to physical or mental health conditions that affect a spouse’s ability to work, the cost of ongoing care, or the legitimacy of a claimed disability that is being used to justify a higher or lower support number.

These relationships are part of why Ford Law is often retained on contested spousal support matters. We can deploy the right expert at the right time, whether to bolster a client’s claim for support or to defend against a request that is not supported by the actual facts of the marriage.

Defending Against an Unreasonable Spousal Support Request

Not every motion for spousal support is well-founded. We frequently represent clients who are facing temporary support requests that overstate need, understate the requesting spouse’s earning capacity, or rely on a lifestyle that is not actually supported by the marital record.

Common defenses we develop in these cases include:

  • Showing the requesting spouse has access to community funds or income that they have not fully disclosed
  • Establishing the requesting spouse’s actual earning capacity through a vocational evaluation
  • Demonstrating that the claimed standard of living is not supported by historical spending records
  • Identifying separate property income or gifts being treated as community resources
  • Negotiating an interim arrangement (use of the home, division of bills, allocation of debts) that addresses needs without a cash transfer
Modifying or Terminating Temporary Support

Temporary support orders are not set in stone. As discovery progresses and new financial information comes to light, either side can ask the court to modify the order. Reasons we frequently file or oppose modification motions include:

  • Discovery reveals previously undisclosed income or assets
  • A spouse loses or changes employment
  • The marital residence sells or one spouse moves out
  • A child’s expenses change materially
  • The receiving spouse cohabits with a new partner

Temporary spousal support typically ends when the court enters the final divorce decree, at which point any post-divorce alimony obligation is set out in the decree itself.

How Ford Law Approaches Temporary Support Motions

Spousal support motions move quickly and are decided early. The case you put in front of a Clark County judge in those first hearings often shapes settlement leverage for the rest of the divorce, so we treat them with the same seriousness as a final hearing.

Our approach is straightforward. We build a clean, organized financial record. We retain experts when the numbers are in dispute. We anticipate the other side’s arguments and walk into the hearing knowing what is going to happen. And we counsel clients candidly about what is realistic, because the goal is not a bigger or smaller temporary order than your case can support; it is the right one for your facts.

Who We Represent in Spousal Support Cases
  • Spouses leaving long marriages with limited recent work history
  • Higher-earning spouses defending against inflated support requests
  • Business owners and professionals with complex compensation
  • Stay-at-home parents seeking interim support to maintain the household and children’s stability
  • Clients in marriages where one spouse controls the assets and information
  • Spouses with legitimate health concerns that affect their ability to work

Frequently Asked Questions

Spousal support generally refers to payments ordered while the divorce is pending, also called temporary maintenance or pendente lite support. Alimony refers to support ordered in the final decree of divorce. Nevada law and judges sometimes use the terms interchangeably, but the distinction matters for strategy because the standards, evidence, and modification rules differ between the two stages.

It depends on the court's calendar, but a motion for temporary support can typically be heard within a few weeks of filing. We move quickly when a client is being financially squeezed, including filing for emergency relief if circumstances warrant.

Nevada does not use a fixed formula for temporary support. Judges look at need, ability to pay, the marital standard of living, and access to community resources. The right financial presentation, supported by experts where needed, is often the difference between a workable order and one that creates real hardship for either spouse.

Yes. Either party can file to modify the order if there is a material change in circumstances or if discovery reveals previously undisclosed income or assets. Temporary orders also end when the divorce decree is entered.

If your spouse files a motion and the court finds the legal standards are met, yes. The right defense, however, can dramatically reduce or eliminate a temporary support obligation. Vocational evaluations, lifestyle analysis, and disclosures of the requesting spouse's actual resources are common tools.

They are decided under different standards, but the financial record built during the temporary phase often informs the final alimony decision. That is one reason we treat temporary support hearings as more than a stopgap; what happens in those early hearings can shape the entire case.

Next Steps

To speak with a Las Vegas spousal support attorney about a motion you need to file or oppose, click the button below to schedule a confidential consultation with Ford Law. We represent clients across Summerlin, Henderson, and the greater Las Vegas Valley.

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Spousal Support Attorney in Las Vegas

Your financial future matters during and after divorce. Working with an experienced Las Vegas spousal support attorney can help ensure fair financial arrangements that protect your standard of living. At Ford Law, we provide strategic guidance for clients seeking, modifying, or contesting spousal support orders in Summerlin and throughout the Las Vegas area. Contact us today to schedule a confidential consultation.