Alimony Tax Calculator β€” Pre-2019 vs Post-2018 Rules

Calculate the tax impact of alimony payments based on your divorce agreement date. Pre-2019 agreements: deductible by payer, taxable to recipient. Post-2018: no tax effect for either party.

The single most important factor for alimony taxation
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Total annual cash payments under the agreement
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Gross income before alimony deduction
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Income excluding alimony received
Quick alimony:
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Net Household Tax Impact
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Payer Tax Impact
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Recipient Tax Impact
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Pre-2019 vs Post-2018 Difference

Tax Calculation Detail

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Alimony Tax Rules: The Critical Cut-Off Date

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) fundamentally changed the tax treatment of alimony, effective for divorce agreements executed on or after January 1, 2019.

Pre-2019 Agreements (Old Rules β€” Still Apply)

Payer: Deducts alimony as above-the-line deduction (reduces AGI, no need to itemize)
Recipient: Reports alimony as ordinary income on Form 1040
Net household effect: Tax rate arbitrage β€” household saves if payer is in higher bracket
Household tax saving = Alimony Γ— (Payer marginal rate βˆ’ Recipient marginal rate)

Post-2018 Agreements (New Rules)

Payer: No deduction β€” alimony is paid from after-tax dollars
Recipient: No income β€” alimony is received tax-free
Net household effect: Zero tax impact from alimony payments themselves
The payer bears the full after-tax cost with no offsetting benefit

Example: $30,000 annual alimony

Pre-2019 agreement | Payer: $150K income (24% bracket) | Recipient: $40K income (12% bracket)
Payer saves: $30,000 Γ— 24% = $7,200 in federal tax
Recipient pays: ($40K + $30K) vs $40K alone β†’ roughly $3,600 in additional tax
Net household benefit: $7,200 βˆ’ $3,600 = $3,600 per year

Post-2018 agreement: Zero tax effect for both parties. Payer pays $30,000 from after-tax income, recipient receives $30,000 tax-free. Net household tax impact: $0.
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Modification Analysis & Child Support Distinction

Understand the tax cost of modifying a pre-2019 agreement and the difference between alimony vs child support

Modifying a pre-2019 divorce agreement after 2018 can trigger new TCJA rules β€” permanently eliminating the payer's deduction. Understand the financial cost before modifying.

Pre-2019 Agreement β€” No Modification

Old rules continue indefinitely. Payer deducts, recipient reports income. Parties cannot retroactively change to new rules without explicit election language in a modification.

Pre-2019 Agreement β€” Modified After 2018

If the modification document includes language adopting TCJA rules, the new rules apply prospectively from the modification date. The payer loses the deduction permanently going forward.

Child Support vs Alimony β€” Never Deductible / Never Taxable

Payment TypePayer DeductionRecipient TaxableRule
Alimony (pre-2019 agreement) Yes β€” above-the-line Yes β€” ordinary income Pre-TCJA rules
Alimony (post-2018 agreement) No deduction No β€” tax-free TCJA 2017
Child support Never deductible Never taxable Permanent rule (all years)
Property settlement Not deductible Not income Separate asset division rules
Calculate the annual tax cost of modifying a pre-2019 agreement above to see the financial impact.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is alimony tax deductible in 2026?
It depends entirely on when the divorce or separation agreement was executed. For agreements finalized before January 1, 2019 (pre-TCJA), alimony is still deductible by the payer as an above-the-line deduction and is taxable income to the recipient β€” this rule continues indefinitely unless the agreement is modified and parties elect new rules. For agreements finalized on or after January 1, 2019, alimony has no tax effect: the payer receives no deduction and the recipient does not report it as income.
What counts as alimony for tax purposes?
For pre-2019 agreements, a payment qualifies as deductible alimony if it: (1) is made in cash, (2) is made under a divorce or separation instrument, (3) the spouses are not members of the same household, (4) there is no liability to make payments after the recipient's death, and (5) it is not designated as non-alimony. Child support never qualifies β€” it is never deductible by the payer and never taxable to the recipient. Property settlements are also not alimony.
What happens if I modify a pre-2019 divorce agreement?
If you modify (not just continue) a pre-2019 divorce agreement after December 31, 2018, and the modification specifically states that the TCJA rules apply, then the new rules take effect from that point. This means the payer loses the deduction and the recipient stops reporting the income. If the modification does not include this election, the pre-2019 rules continue to apply. This is a critical distinction β€” consult a tax professional before modifying any pre-2019 agreement.
How much tax do I save on alimony under pre-2019 rules?
Under pre-2019 rules, the payer deducts alimony as an above-the-line deduction (Schedule 1, Form 1040), which reduces Adjusted Gross Income. This means the payer saves taxes at their marginal rate. For example, a payer in the 24% bracket paying $32,200 in alimony saves $7,200 in federal income tax. The recipient must report the full $32,200 as ordinary income and pay tax at their own marginal rate β€” often lower than the payer's rate, creating a household tax benefit.
Does the payer or recipient benefit more from pre-2019 alimony rules?
Pre-2019 rules typically benefit the household as a whole because income is shifted from the higher-earning payer (higher tax bracket) to the lower-earning recipient (lower tax bracket). For example, if the payer is in the 32% bracket and the recipient is in the 12% bracket, every $1 of alimony saves $0.32 for the payer but only costs $0.12 for the recipient β€” a net household savings of $0.20 per dollar. The payer always benefits more from the deduction than the recipient pays in tax (assuming income disparity).