Based on what you say I doubt she has a claim for alimony.
In general a judge will award alimony when one spouse has been economically dependent on the other spouse for most of a lengthy marriage. That in turn is often based on the economically dependent spouse being so because of a mutual decision in the marriage like W being home for kids, a mutual decision to enable other spouse to work on career and so on.
A necessary factor is also that the spouse requesting alimony has made sacrifices enabling the other to be financially better off than the other spouse. So a wife who waits tables to get her H through law school can expect alimony. The longer the marriage the higher the amount. A spouse that stays at home for the kids enabling the other to climb the corporate ladder also has a strong case for alimony.
A spouse that earns no income pre-marriage and is in a marriage for only 2 ½ years. I seriously doubt she has any claims to alimony. I also doubt that the amounts earned in pensions and savings in this time can be significant. I would guess a one-time buyout would be negotiated.
Having said that – have you two looked at the methodology presented on this site to save marriages? MB is not only for saving a marriage after infidelity.
Many thanks for the info.
I am still hoping to save the marriage but much of the resources I see here and elsewhere concerns infidelity, which doesn't apply in our case.
The problem is that she is not cooperating, constantly saying its my fault and always digging for old problems that happened two or three years ago.
Well we agreed to see the marriage counselor in a couple of weeks (though she only agreed to turn up for this one visit). I intend to put it to her, either work with me to save the marriage, or I might as well cut my losses now rather than suffer a greater financial burden later.