How much of your paycheck a creditor can garnish for ordinary consumer debt in New York, and what's protected. General information, not legal advice — confirm the cited statute.
Max garnishment (consumer debt)
Least of 10% of gross income, 25% of disposable earnings, or the amount above 30× the state minimum wage
What's protected
Weekly pay under 30× the NY minimum wage is protected, and never more than 10% of gross
Statute
N.Y. CPLR § 5231
New York note: New York's 10%-of-gross ceiling often protects more than the federal 25%-of-disposable rule. Source: N.Y. CPLR § 5231.
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How to reduce or stop garnishment in New York
Make the creditor prove the debt and the judgment — challenge it if the amount or service is wrong.
File a claim of exemption with the court fast: head-of-household, low-income and dependent exemptions usually aren't automatic.
New York protects: weekly pay under 30× the ny minimum wage is protected, and never more than 10% of gross.
Negotiate a payment plan or settlement before the garnishment takes the full least of 10% of gross income, 25% of disposable earnings, or the amount above 30× the state minimum wage.
True for everyone facing garnishment
Federal law already protects a weekly floor — and many states protect more — for consumer debt, a creditor can take at most the lesser of 25% of your disposable pay or the amount above 30× the federal minimum wage ($217.50/week). Many states cap it lower or shield far more.
Four states ban consumer-debt wage garnishment entirely — Texas, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and South Carolina do not allow your wages to be garnished for ordinary debts like credit cards or medical bills.
Child support, taxes and student loans are different — and harsher — the consumer-debt caps here don't apply to child support (up to 50–60%), back taxes, or defaulted federal student loans (15%) — those follow their own, higher limits.
A creditor needs a court judgment first (for consumer debt) — for credit-card or medical debt, a creditor must sue and win a judgment before garnishing — so responding to the lawsuit is your first and best chance to stop it.
'Disposable earnings' means after legally-required deductions only — it's your pay after taxes and mandatory withholdings — not after rent, car payments or other bills, so the garnishable base is larger than people expect.
You can claim exemptions — but usually only if you file them — head-of-household, low-income and dependent exemptions often aren't automatic; you must file a claim of exemption with the court, fast, or you lose them.
Money in a bank account isn't as protected as wages — once garnished wages or other funds hit your account they can be levied separately — even in states that ban wage garnishment — so exemptions there matter too.
FAQ
How much of my paycheck can be garnished in New York?
For ordinary consumer debt, New York allows: least of 10% of gross income, 25% of disposable earnings, or the amount above 30× the state minimum wage. Weekly pay under 30× the NY minimum wage is protected, and never more than 10% of gross. New York's 10%-of-gross ceiling often protects more than the federal 25%-of-disposable rule.
Can a creditor garnish my wages without a court judgment in New York?
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 York?
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.