A wage garnishment is a legal procedure through which a
percentage of a person's earnings are withheld by an employer
for the payment of a debt. Most wage garnishments are made by
court order. Other types of wage garnishments are of legal or
open procedures made by the IRS or state tax collection agency
levies for unpaid taxes and federal agency administrative
garnishments for non-tax debts owed to the federal government.
Wage garnishments do not include voluntary wage garnishments.
Some debtor's may voluntarily consort with their employers to
turn over a specified amount of their earnings to a creditor to
absolve the debt voluntarily, without the use of a court order.
The Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor's
Employment Standards Administration has dispensed Title III of
the Consumer Credit Protection Act (CCPA) to limit the amount of
an employee's earnings that are garnished and protects
employee's from losing their jobs if their wages are garnished
for only one debt.
Title III of the CCPA is enforced in all 50 states, including
the District of Columbia, and all U.S. territories and
possessions. This is a law that protects everyone who receives
personal earning and incomes, e.g. wages, salaries, commissions,
bonuses or earnings from a pension or retirement plan. The CCPA
also forbids an employer from discharging an employee whose
wages are garnished for any one debt, regardless of the number
of levies made or attempts made to collect that debt, because of
one single wage garnishment. The CCPA does not forbid
discharging an employee when an employee's wages are separately
garnished for two or more debts owed.
The amount of pay subject to wage garnishment is based on the
employee's disposable wages. This is the amount of pay left over
after all legally required deductions are made, e.g. federal,
state and local taxes, State Unemployment Insurance, Social
Security or any other withholdings for employee retirement
systems required by law.
Deductions that are not required by law and that may not be
subtracted from gross earnings when calculating disposable
earnings under the CCPA are: voluntary wage deductions, union
dues, health and life insurance, charitable contributions,
savings bonds, optional retirement plans, reimbursements to
employers for payroll advances or merchandise.
Title III of the CCPA sets a maximum amount that may be
garnished in any pay period, regardless of how many wage
garnishment orders are received by the employer. For common wage
garnishments, excluding those for child support, alimony,
bankruptcy, or any state or federal tax, the weekly amount may
not exceed 25% of the employee's disposable earnings or by the
amount by which an employee's disposable earnings are greater
than 30 times the federal minimum wage. If a state wage
garnishment law differs from the CCPA, the law resulting in the
smaller wage garnishment must be observed.
About the author:
Henry Byers, Retired IRS Manager and
Wage Garnishment
Law expert - focusing on
IRS Tax Levy and
IRS Bank Levy