Don’t take it all: Wage garnishment limitations
A wage garnishment is any legal or reasonable procedure that requires employers to withhold a portion of an employee’s earnings to pay off the employee’s debt. Most garnishments are required through Court orders most garnishments.
Title III of the Consumer Credit Protection Act (CCPA) limits the amount of wages that an employer may garnish from an employee’s earnings.
Common reasons for wage garnishments include:
- Unpaid taxes,
- Child support,
- Credit card debt,
- Defaulted student loans,
- Medical bills, and
- Unpaid court fees.
Wage garnishments do not include situations in which employees voluntarily agree that their employers may turn over a specified amount of their earnings to a creditor or creditors.
Limit is based on disposable earnings
Earnings are compensation paid or payable for personal services, including wages, salaries, commissions, bonuses, and periodic payments from a pension or retirement program. Payments from an employment-based disability plan are also earnings. Earnings may include payments received in lump sums.
The amount of pay subject to garnishment is based on an employee’s “disposable earnings,” which is the amount of earnings left after legally required deductions — such as federal, state, and local taxes — and the employee’s share of Social Security, Medicare, and State Unemployment Insurance tax. It also includes withholdings for employee retirement plans required by law.
For ordinary garnishments (i.e., those not for support, bankruptcy, or any state or federal tax), the weekly amount may not exceed the lesser of:
- 25 percent of the employee’s disposable earnings, or
- The amount by which an employee’s disposable earnings are greater than 30 times the federal minimum wage (currently $7.25 an hour).
For example:
- If the pay period is weekly and disposable earnings are $217.50 ($7.25 × 30) or less, there can be no garnishment.
- If disposable earnings are more than $217.50 but less than $290 ($7.25 × 40), the amount above $217.50 may be garnished.
- If disposable earnings are $290 or more, a maximum of 25 percent may be garnished.
When pay periods cover more than one week, employers use multiples of the weekly restrictions to calculate the maximum amounts that may be garnished.
The limit remains regardless of the number of garnishment orders received by the employer.
Child support and alimony/maintenance garnishments
The CCPA also limits the amount of earnings that may be garnished pursuant to court orders for child support or alimony. The law allows up to:
- 50 percent of an employee’s disposable earnings to be garnished for these purposes if the employee is supporting another spouse or child, or
- 60 percent if the employee is not. An additional 5 percent may be garnished for support payments more than 12 weeks overdue.
Key to remember: Employers must be aware of the limits related to an employee’s wages that may be withheld for garnishment. These limits can depend upon the reason for the garnishment.