If the IRS is garnishing your paycheck — or threatening to — here is what you need to know right now.
A wage garnishment — technically called a wage levy — is when the IRS legally requires your employer to withhold a portion of your paycheck and send it directly to the IRS to satisfy a tax debt. Unlike a one-time bank levy, wage garnishments continue each pay period until the debt is paid or the IRS releases the levy.
The IRS wage levy is not capped at a flat percentage like court-ordered garnishments. Instead, the IRS uses Publication 1494 tables to determine an "exempt amount" based on your filing status and number of dependents. Everything above that exempt amount can be taken.
For many taxpayers, this means the IRS can take 50–70% or more of their net paycheck. This is one of the most aggressive tools in the IRS collection arsenal.
The IRS cannot immediately garnish your wages. You will receive a sequence of notices first — each representing an opportunity to resolve the debt before escalation.
First notice that you owe taxes. Sent after assessment. You have 60 days to respond or pay before further notices.
A follow-up if the CP14 was ignored. Another opportunity to make arrangements.
Warns that the IRS intends to seize assets, including state tax refunds. Take this notice seriously.
This is the critical letter. You have 30 days from this letter to appeal (Collection Due Process hearing) or make arrangements. After 30 days, the IRS can proceed with garnishment.
If no action is taken, the IRS notifies your employer directly with a levy form. Your employer is legally required to comply.
The IRS is required to release a wage levy in any of these situations:
You still have 30 days. This is your window to either:
Do not wait. The 30-day window closes quickly, and once the employer levy is issued, it takes additional steps to release it.
Yes. The IRS can levy Social Security retirement and disability benefits through the Federal Payment Levy Program. Up to 15% of each payment can be levied. SSI benefits are generally exempt.
Your employer will typically inform you after they receive the levy form, since they are required to give you a portion of your wages and must explain what was withheld.
Federal law prohibits employers from firing an employee solely because of a single wage garnishment. However, this protection does not extend to multiple garnishments from different creditors.
It continues until the tax debt is paid, the levy is released, or the balance is otherwise resolved. There is no automatic expiration for IRS wage levies.
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