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State-Specific Garnishment Rules

Wage garnishment laws vary by state, and recent changes may affect how much of an employee’s earnings can be withheld. For the most up-to-date information, please contact your state’s labor department.

Under federal law, garnishment restrictions do not apply to certain bankruptcy court orders or debts owed for federal or state taxes. If a state’s wage garnishment law differs from the Consumer Credit Protection Act (CCPA), the law that results in the smaller garnishment must be followed.

Alabama

  • Follows federal guidelines.

  • Creditors with judgments may garnish up to 25% of disposable wages.

  • Contact: Audits-Cashiering@labor.alabama.gov or call (334) 954-4723.

Alaska

  • The first $402.50 of an employee’s weekly net wages are exempt from garnishment.

  • Creditors may garnish up to 25% of remaining wages.

  • Contact: Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development at (907) 465-2700.

Arizona

  • Creditors may garnish the lesser of:

    • 25% of nonexempt disposable earnings, or

    • Any earnings exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • Contact: Arizona Industrial Commission at (602) 542-4515 (Phoenix) or (520) 628-5459 (Tucson).

Arkansas

  • If exempted earnings are 30 times the minimum wage or less, creditors cannot garnish wages.

  • If earnings exceed 30 times the minimum wage, creditors may garnish:

    • The amount above minimum wage, or

    • 25% of disposable earnings.

  • Child support garnishment may reach 50% of income.

  • Contact: Arkansas Department of Labor at (501) 682-4500.

California

  • Follows federal garnishment rules and exemptions.

  • Creditors may garnish up to 25% of an employee’s wages.

  • Contact: California Labor and Workforce Development Agency at (916) 263-1811.

Colorado

  • Creditors may garnish the greater of:

    • 25% of disposable earnings, or

    • Earnings exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • Example: If the federal minimum wage is $7.25/hour, creditors may garnish any disposable income beyond $217.50 per week.

  • Contact: Colorado Department of Labor and Employment at (888) 390-7936.

Connecticut

  • Garnishments may be made on 25% of net earnings, or more if weekly disposable earnings exceed 40 times the hourly minimum wage.

  • Contact: Connecticut Department of Labor at (860) 263-6000.

Delaware

  • Garnishments can be made on 15% of disposable earnings or $127.50 of weekly income.

  • Personal bank accounts cannot be garnished.

  • Contact: Delaware Labor Department at (302) 451-3423.

District of Columbia

  • Wage garnishment in D.C. is limited by Statute 15 U.S.C. §1673 and D.C. Statute Section 16-572.

  • The maximum a creditor can garnish is 25% of exempt earnings or 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • D.C. Government employees are exempt from wage garnishment.

  • Contact: District of Columbia Department of Employment Services at (202) 671-1900.

Florida

  • A creditor can garnish 25% of expendable income or the amount by which expendable income exceeds 30 times the federal minimum wage, whichever is less.

  • Wages cannot be garnished for those earning 30 times less than the minimum wage.

  • If a debtor has no income, a creditor may claim $1,000 of the property value of their automobile.

  • Contact: Florida Agency for Workforce Innovation at (800) 342-3450.

Georgia

  • Follows federal garnishment rules and exemptions.

  • Wages can be garnished for the lesser of:

    • 25% of exempt income, or

    • Earnings exceeding 30 times the minimum wage.

  • Expendable income below 30 times the minimum wage cannot be garnished.

  • Contact: Georgia Department of Labor at (404) 656-3011.

Guam

  • Wage garnishments are determined on a case-by-case basis under Guam Rules of Civil Procedure.

  • Contact: Guam Department of Labor at (671) 475-7043.

Hawaii

  • Wage garnishment follows a three-tier system:

    • 5% of the first $100 of expendable earnings per month.

    • 10% of the second $100 of expendable earnings per month.

    • 20% of expendable earnings exceeding $200 per month.

  • Contact: Hawaii Department of Labor and Industrial Relations at (808) 586-8842.

Idaho

  • Follows federal garnishment rules.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of attachable earnings, or any amount exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • Contact: Idaho Department of Labor at (208) 332-3579.

Illinois

  • Creditors may garnish the greater of:

    • 15% of expendable earnings, or

    • Earnings exceeding 45 times the federal minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: Illinois Department of Labor at (312) 793-2800.

Indiana

  • The maximum garnishment allowed is the lesser of:

    • 25% of expendable earnings, or

    • Earnings exceeding 30 times the minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: Indiana Department of Labor at (317) 232-2655.

Iowa

  • Follows federal wage garnishment guidelines.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of disposable wages, or earnings exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • Contact: Iowa Workforce Development at (515) 242-5870.

Kansas

  • The maximum garnishment allowed is the lesser of:

    • 25% of expendable earnings, or

    • Earnings exceeding 30 times the minimum hourly wage.

  • Kansas law prohibits multiple garnishments on a debtor’s income within a 30-day period.

  • Contact: Kansas Department of Labor at (785) 296-5000.

Kentucky

  • Follows federal wage garnishment standards.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of disposable income, or 30 times the minimum hourly wage, whichever is less.

  • Contact: Kentucky Labor Cabinet at (502) 564-3070.

Louisiana

  • Creditors may garnish up to 25% of expendable earnings per week, but not less than 30 times the minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: Louisiana Department of Labor at (225) 342-3111.

Maine

  • Wage garnishment is limited to 25% of expendable income or 40 times the minimum wage per week, whichever is smaller.

  • Contact: Maine Department of Labor at (207) 623-7900.

Maryland

  • Garnishment laws vary by county.

  • Creditors may garnish 75% of disposable income, up to $145 per week, with a total exemption of $3,000 in recovered funds.

  • Counties Caroline, Worcester, Kent, and Queen Anne follow federal guidelines, allowing garnishment of 25% of an employee’s wages.

  • Contact: Maryland Department of Labor and Industry at (410) 767-2357.

Massachusetts

  • Massachusetts has stricter wage garnishment laws than federal regulations.

  • Creditors may garnish 15% of gross wages (before taxes and deductions).

  • Contact: Massachusetts Department of Labor and Workforce Development at (617) 626-7100.

Michigan

  • Follows federal garnishment rules.

  • Garnishments may be 25% of expendable earnings, or any amount exceeding 30 times the federal hourly minimum wage.

  • Contact: Michigan Department of Labor and Economic Growth at (517) 335-0400.

Minnesota

  • The maximum garnishment per pay period is the lesser of:

    • 25% of attachable earnings, or

    • Earnings exceeding 40 times the minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry at (651) 284-5070.

Mississippi

  • Follows federal wage garnishment guidelines and exemptions.

  • Wages may be garnished at 25% of nonessential earnings weekly, or 30 times the federal minimum hourly wage, whichever is less.

  • Contact: Mississippi Department of Employment Security at (601) 321-6000.

Missouri

  • Garnishment laws differ from federal guidelines.

  • Creditors may garnish the lesser of:

    • 25% of weekly disposable income, or

    • 10% of weekly disposable income if the garnishee is the head of household with other obligations.

  • Contact: Missouri Labor and Industrial Relations at (573) 751-7500.

Montana

  • Follows federal wage garnishment procedures.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of disposable wages or earnings exceeding 30 times the federal minimum hourly wage.

  • Child support, alimony, student loans, and tax debts may be garnished at any amount.

  • Contact: Montana Department of Labor and Industry at (406) 444-9091.

Nebraska

  • Garnishment laws are stricter than federal guidelines.

  • Creditors may garnish the greater of:

    • 75% of expendable earnings,

    • 85% if head of household, or

    • 30 times the federal minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: Nebraska Department of Labor at (402) 471-9000.

Nevada

  • Follows federal wage garnishment standards.

  • Wages may be garnished up to 25% of expendable earnings per week, or any amount exceeding 30 times the federal minimum hourly wage, whichever is less.

  • Support orders may be garnished at different rates.

  • Contact: Nevada Department of Business and Industry at (702) 486-2650.

New Hampshire

  • Garnishment laws are less strict than federal guidelines.

  • Creditors may garnish wages up to 50 times the federal minimum hourly wage.

  • Future wages are exempt from garnishment, and litigants cannot request ongoing orders.

  • Contact: New Hampshire Department of Labor at (603) 271-3176.

New Jersey

  • Garnishment laws exceed federal limits.

  • Creditors may garnish the lesser of:

    • 10% of gross wages, or

    • 25% of disposable earnings.

  • Wages cannot be garnished for employees earning $154.50 or less per week.

  • Contact: New Jersey Department of Labor at (609) 777-3200.

New Mexico

  • Creditors may request a continuing wage garnishment order, meaning wages will be automatically garnished if the employee changes jobs.

  • Garnishment may be up to 25% of expendable earnings per paycheck until the judgment is paid in full.

  • Child support garnishments may reach 50% of expendable wages, canceling out subsequent garnishments.

  • Contact: New Mexico Department of Labor at (505) 841-8450.

New York

  • Maximum wage garnishment is 10% of gross income.

  • If an employee is already garnished for alimony or child support, the combined garnishments cannot exceed 25% of expendable earnings.

  • Contact: New York Department of Labor at (518) 457-5519.

North Carolina

  • Creditors cannot garnish wages for consumer debts.

  • Garnishment is only permitted for:

    • Taxes,

    • Ambulance fees, and

    • Child support payments in arrears.

  • Contact: North Carolina Department of Labor at (919) 733-7166.

North Dakota

  • Garnishment laws are less punitive than federal guidelines.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of expendable earnings, or any amount exceeding 40 times the federal minimum hourly wage.

  • Garnishment amount is reduced weekly by $20 for each dependent family member residing with the debtor.

  • Contact: North Dakota Department of Labor at (701) 328-2660.

Ohio

  • Follows federal garnishment rules and exemptions.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of disposable earnings, or any amount exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • Contact: Ohio Department of Commerce at (614) 644-2239.

Oklahoma

  • Follows federal wage garnishment regulations and exemptions.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of non-essential income, or any amount exceeding 30 times the minimum wage.

  • Contact: Oklahoma Department of Labor at (405) 528-1500.

Oregon

  • Provides an exemption of 75% of expendable earnings, or any amount exceeding 40 times the federal minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries at (971) 673-0761.

Pennsylvania

  • Creditors cannot garnish wages for consumer debts.

  • Garnishment is only permitted for:

    • Taxes in arrears,

    • Child support and alimony payments, and

    • Unpaid student loans.

  • Contact: Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry at (717) 787-5279.

Puerto Rico

  • Follows federal wage garnishment guidelines.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of disposable income, or any amount exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • Contact: Puerto Rico Department of Labor and Human Resources at (787) 754-2100.

Rhode Island

  • Adheres to federal wage garnishment rules and exemptions.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of expendable earnings, or any amount exceeding 30 times the federal minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training at (401) 462-8000.

South Carolina

  • Creditors cannot garnish wages for consumer debts.

  • Garnishment is only permitted for:

    • Child support and alimony payments,

    • Taxes in arrears, and

    • Defaulted student loans.

  • Creditors may create liens against a debtor’s property.

  • Contact: South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing, and Regulations at (803) 896-4300.

South Dakota

  • Garnishment laws are more lenient than federal guidelines.

  • Creditors may garnish 20% of expendable earnings, but only for a 60-day period.

  • Renewals must be applied for every two months.

  • Contact: South Dakota Department of Labor at (605) 773-3682.

Tennessee

  • Follows federal wage garnishment rules.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of expendable income, or any amount exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • A $2.50 per week exemption is allowed for each dependent child under age 16 in the debtor’s household.

  • Contact: Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development at (615) 741-2257.

Texas

  • Wages cannot be garnished, except for child support payments.

  • Non-wage income may be garnished, except for Social Security benefits.

  • Contact: Texas Workforce Commission at (512) 475-2670.

Utah

  • Garnishment is set at a flat fee of $142.50 per week of expendable earnings.

  • Contact: Utah Labor Commission at (801) 530-6800.

Vermont

  • 75% of wages are exempt from garnishment.

  • Creditors may garnish up to 25% of disposable wages.

  • Contact: Vermont Department of Labor at (802) 828-4000.

Virginia

  • Follows federal wage garnishment rules.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of expendable earnings, or any amount exceeding 30 times the minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: Virginia Department of Labor and Industry at (804) 371-2327.

Virgin Islands

  • Garnishments may be levied at 10% of gross wages.

  • Contact: Virgin Islands Department of Labor at (340) 776-3700.

Washington

  • Follows federal wage garnishment standards.

  • Creditors may garnish 25% of expendable earnings, or any amount exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage.

  • Contact: Washington Department of Labor and Industries at (360) 902-4200.

West Virginia

  • Garnishment is limited to the lesser of:

    • 20% of expendable income, or

    • 30 times the minimum hourly wage.

  • Contact: West Virginia Division of Labor at (304) 558-7890.

Wisconsin

  • 80% of net pay is exempt from garnishment.

  • Creditors may garnish up to 20% of disposable income for debt collection.

  • Contact: Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development at (608) 266-6861.

Wyoming

  • 25% of disposable income is subject to garnishment.

  • If a debtor is ordered to pay child support, 65% of disposable income is protected from garnishment.

  • Contact: Wyoming Department of Employment at (307) 777-7261.