Wage Garnishment Limits in California
California follows the federal CCPA wage-garnishment limit of 25% on disposable earnings, with a floor protecting at least 30 times the federal minimum wage.
| Limit | Rule |
|---|---|
| Maximum % | 25% |
| California rule | State law further limits to 25% or 40x state minimum wage, whichever less. |
| Additional protection | Low-income protection; garnishment-exempt if below threshold. |
Federal Floor (CCPA) -- Applies in Every State
The federal Consumer Credit Protection Act (CCPA) sets the national floor for wage garnishment protection. No state can go below it, but many states add stronger protection on top.
The CCPA formula: the garnishable amount is the LESSER of 25% of disposable earnings, OR the amount by which weekly disposable earnings exceed 30 times the federal minimum wage ($7.25/hr = $217.50/week).
"Disposable earnings" means gross pay minus legally required deductions (taxes, Social Security, Medicare, and mandatory retirement).
See exempt income sources for the full list of income streams that are completely off-limits to garnishment.
Which California Debts Can Trigger Garnishment?
Not every debt creates garnishment rights. In California, ordinary creditors must first:
- File a lawsuit in state court and serve you with process.
- Win a judgment - either by default (if you don't respond), summary judgment, or trial.
- File a writ of garnishment with the court.
- Serve the writ on your employer, who then begins withholding.
A few debts skip some of these steps:
- Federal student loans - administrative wage garnishment up to 15% without a court order (ED-authorized).
- IRS/state tax debts - administrative levy without court order.
- Child support - automatic income withholding; generally 50-60% cap.
- Court-ordered restitution - handled through court order directly.
Your California credit card company cannot simply call your employer and start garnishment -- they need the court process above. See our garnishment timeline guide.
How to Stop California Garnishment Fast
Once garnishment begins, you have several options in California:
- Claim exemptions - head-of-household, low income, or specific income sources like SSDI/SSI. File the claim form promptly (deadlines are short).
- Negotiate a settlement - some creditors will release the garnishment for a lump-sum payment at 40-60% of the debt.
- File bankruptcy - the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. Section 362 freezes garnishment within 24 hours of filing. Wages already withheld but not yet remitted to the creditor may also be recoverable.
- Motion to quash - if the underlying judgment was obtained in error (wrong defendant, improper service, SOL expired), you can move to vacate the judgment itself.
See the full stop-garnishment playbook and emergency bankruptcy filing.
California Federal Bankruptcy Data
When garnishment cannot be stopped administratively, bankruptcy's automatic stay halts it immediately. These FJC numbers show how California debtors use the bankruptcy remedy.
Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 6,723 consumer bankruptcy cases from California's federal bankruptcy courts.
| Chapter | Cases Filed | Discharge Rate | Dismissal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chapter 7 | 5,808 | 98.4% | 1.6% |
| Chapter 13 | 915 | 38.8% | 61.2% |
Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.
Can You Recover California Wages Already Taken?
Yes, in limited circumstances. Under 11 U.S.C. Section 547 (preference avoidance), wages garnished within 90 days before a bankruptcy filing can often be clawed back if the total garnished exceeds $600 and the debt was a pre-existing antecedent debt. The trustee recovers the money and returns it to the estate.
For consumer Chapter 7 filers, the practical test:
- Was more than $600 garnished in the 90 days before filing?
- Were you insolvent when the garnishment happened?
- Is the creditor ordinary (not an insider)?
If yes to all three, file an objection or preference adversary. Details at getting money back after garnishment.
California Head-of-Household and Low-Income Protection
Low-income protection; garnishment-exempt if below threshold.
If you qualify, file the California exemption claim immediately after garnishment begins. In most states, the deadline is within 10-20 days of the notice of garnishment.
Bank Account Levy in California
A separate but related remedy is the bank account levy: instead of (or in addition to) wage garnishment, a California creditor with a judgment can freeze your bank account and take funds directly. Key differences:
- Single-strike hit. A levy takes everything in the account on the day of service (minus exempt amounts), not a percentage ongoing like wage garnishment.
- Federal benefit protection. Treasury's 2011 rule protects the last two months of direct-deposited federal benefits (SSDI, SSI, VA, retirement) automatically.
- California exemption claim. You must file the exemption claim form promptly (often within 10-20 days) to preserve non-federal exempt amounts.
- Commingling risk. If you deposit wages in the same account as federal benefits, the whole account can be frozen pending a hearing.
Keep federal benefits in a separate dedicated account when possible. See California bank account levy for the full playbook.
California Garnishment Duration and Release
In California, a wage garnishment typically continues until one of the following:
- Judgment is paid in full - principal, interest, and court costs. Most California judgments accrue post-judgment interest at statutory rates.
- Creditor voluntarily releases - usually after settlement negotiation for a lump-sum reduced amount.
- Employment ends - garnishment does not automatically follow you to a new employer; the creditor must re-serve.
- Bankruptcy filing - the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. Section 362 halts garnishment immediately. Post-petition wages are part of your estate protections.
- Successful exemption claim - head-of-household, low-income, or specific exempt-source findings.
- Judgment expires - California judgments have a limited lifespan (typically 10-20 years) unless renewed, though most creditors renew before expiration.
If multiple creditors have judgments, California law generally applies a first-in-time rule: the first garnishment served runs until satisfied, then the next creditor in line takes priority.