Wage garnishment limit in New Hampshire

How much of your paycheck a creditor can garnish for ordinary consumer debt in New Hampshire, and what's protected. General information, not legal advice — confirm the cited statute.

Max garnishment (consumer debt)Wages are largely exempt; garnishment requires a separate court process
What's protectedEarned wages are broadly protected from ordinary creditor garnishment
StatuteN.H. Rev. Stat. § 512:21

New Hampshire note: New Hampshire strongly protects earned wages — consumer-debt wage garnishment is rare and tightly limited. (Verify against the current statute — this figure is less certain.) Source: N.H. Rev. Stat. § 512:21.

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How to reduce or stop garnishment in New Hampshire

True for everyone facing garnishment

FAQ

How much of my paycheck can be garnished in New Hampshire?

For ordinary consumer debt, New Hampshire allows: wages are largely exempt; garnishment requires a separate court process. Earned wages are broadly protected from ordinary creditor garnishment. New Hampshire strongly protects earned wages — consumer-debt wage garnishment is rare and tightly limited.

Can a creditor garnish my wages without a court judgment in New Hampshire?

Not for consumer debt. A credit-card or medical creditor must sue and win a judgment first, so responding to the lawsuit is your best chance to stop the garnishment before it starts.

How do I reduce or stop wage garnishment in New Hampshire?

File a claim of exemption with the court (head-of-household, low-income and dependent exemptions usually aren't automatic), challenge the debt if it's wrong, or negotiate a payment plan. Exemptions are often lost if you don't file them in time.