Wage Garnishment

Stop Garnishments and Protect Your Paycheck

Wage garnishment can disrupt an entire household budget. When a creditor takes money directly from your paycheck, you may have less available for rent, mortgage payments, utilities, groceries, transportation, childcare, and other necessary expenses. Bankruptcy can often stop wage garnishment and help you regain control over your income.

A garnishment usually begins after a creditor files a lawsuit and obtains a judgment. Credit card companies, debt buyers, medical collectors, personal loan lenders, and other creditors may use garnishment to collect unpaid debts. Once the garnishment starts, the financial pressure can grow quickly because each paycheck arrives smaller while other bills continue.

Get Started with Your Case

When you file bankruptcy, the automatic stay usually stops most wage garnishments immediately. Creditors must stop collection activity, and your employer should no longer withhold wages for that debt once proper notice reaches the necessary parties. This protection can begin quickly and may help you stabilize your finances before another paycheck is reduced.

Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 can both stop many garnishments. Chapter 7 may eliminate the underlying debt if it qualifies for discharge. This often applies to credit card judgments, medical bills, personal loans, collection accounts, and many unsecured debts. Once the case succeeds, the creditor can no longer collect that discharged debt.

Chapter 13 may work better when the garnishment exists alongside mortgage arrears, car loan issues, tax debt, or other debts that need a structured plan. Chapter 13 stops the garnishment and places debts into a court-supervised repayment plan. This can allow you to protect income while addressing larger financial problems over time.

Not every garnishment receives the same treatment. Bankruptcy usually does not stop ongoing child support obligations. Some tax-related garnishments may require special review. That is why the type of debt matters. We review the garnishment paperwork, the creditor, the judgment, the amount being withheld, and the rest of your financial situation before recommending a strategy.

Timing also matters. If wages are already being withheld, prompt action may protect future paychecks. In some cases, we may also review whether recently garnished funds can be recovered, depending on the timing and amount.

A garnishment does not have to control your financial life. Bankruptcy provides a legal process that can stop many garnishments, eliminate or reorganize the debt behind them, and create a clearer path forward.

If your paycheck is being garnished or a creditor has threatened garnishment, we can help you understand your options and act quickly to protect your income.

Ready to get answers from a lawyer who understands?

Bankruptcy does not define your future, but it may give you a way to reset. A bankruptcy attorney can review your income, debts, and goals to see what options may be available. Use a free consultation to get informed before you choose a path.

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