Wage garnishment limit in Vermont

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

Max garnishment (consumer debt)More protective than federal (lesser of 25% or amount above a higher state floor)
What's protectedA higher weekly amount is protected than under federal law
StatuteVt. Stat. tit. 12, § 3170

Vermont note: Vermont's higher minimum wage raises the protected weekly floor; consumer-debt garnishment is limited. (Verify against the current statute — this figure is less certain.) Source: Vt. Stat. tit. 12, § 3170.

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How to reduce or stop garnishment in Vermont

True for everyone facing garnishment

FAQ

How much of my paycheck can be garnished in Vermont?

For ordinary consumer debt, Vermont allows: more protective than federal (lesser of 25% or amount above a higher state floor). A higher weekly amount is protected than under federal law. Vermont's higher minimum wage raises the protected weekly floor; consumer-debt garnishment is limited.

Can a creditor garnish my wages without a court judgment in Vermont?

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 Vermont?

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.