Wage garnishment in Ohio: fast ways to stop it and protect your paycheck
Karen Hamilton • April 16, 2026
This guide explains how wage garnishment works in Ohio, what income and assets are exempt, and what to do the moment your pay or bank account is hit. Learn practical ways to negotiate, file objections, claim exemptions, or use Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy and the automatic stay to stop or reduce garnishments and protect future paychecks.

When a wage garnishment hits, it feels like your budget just lost a tire. Money you count on for rent, groceries, or gas is suddenly smaller, and the next payday looks even tighter. The good news is that Ohio law gives you several ways to slow, reduce, or stop a garnishment. Some steps work within days. Others take longer but offer deeper relief.
This guide explains how Ohio garnishment works, what income is protected, and the fastest paths to stop most garnishments, including how the bankruptcy automatic stay can shut it down quickly. You will also find quick scripts for talking with your employer and the collector, plus a same-week filing checklist if you decide bankruptcy is the right move.
How Ohio wage garnishment works
In most consumer debt cases, a creditor must sue and get a judgment before it can garnish wages. After judgment, the creditor serves your employer with a court order to withhold a portion of your pay. The default limit for most consumer debts is the lesser of:
- 25 percent of disposable earnings (your pay after legally required deductions), or
- The amount by which your weekly disposable earnings exceed 30 times the federal minimum wage.
Special rules apply to child support, taxes, and federal student loans. These can garnish more and often do not require a separate lawsuit first.
Bank accounts can also be levied in Ohio. If you see a freeze on your account, act quickly. Exempt money may be protected, but you generally must claim those protections.
What is exempt from garnishment in Ohio?
Ohio and federal law protect certain income and property. Common exemptions include:
- Social Security benefits and SSI
- Veterans benefits
- Certain retirement income and pensions
- Unemployment compensation and workers compensation
- Child support and spousal support you receive
- Many retirement accounts and typical household goods (under Ohio exemption statutes)
- A portion of wages as described above
Exempt funds keep their protection even after deposit if you can trace them, but mixing exempt and non-exempt funds in the same bank account can create confusion. If your exempt money was garnished or frozen, talk with a lawyer right away to file the proper claim of exemption.
Immediate steps when you get a garnishment notice
If you just received a garnishment notice or your paycheck was smaller, take these steps:
- Read the notice carefully. Note the court, case number, creditor, and deadline to object.
- Confirm what is being garnished. Is it wages, a bank account, or both?
- Check for exempt funds. If you are paid from Social Security or another protected source, gather proof.
- Call the creditor or collector. Ask for a pause while you explore solutions or propose a payment you can afford.
- Consider filing an objection. If the amount is wrong, the debt is not yours, or the creditor violated procedure, you may ask the court to reduce or stop the garnishment.
- Evaluate bankruptcy as a fast stop. Filing typically triggers an automatic stay that halts most garnishments immediately.
Ways to stop a garnishment in Ohio
There is no single best choice for every person. Here is how the main options work and how fast they can help.
- Negotiate a voluntary payment plan: If the creditor agrees in writing to stop the garnishment, your employer can release future withholdings. This can work within a pay cycle or two, but the creditor is not required to agree. Get any deal in writing before you rely on it.
- File an objection or claim of exemption: If the amount exceeds legal limits, the debt is mistaken, or funds are exempt, the court can reduce or vacate the order. Timing depends on the court calendar. When exempt funds are at risk, act immediately.
- Seek hardship relief: Some courts may consider hardship arguments, especially where statutory exemptions apply. Documentation of income, expenses, and dependents is essential.
- File bankruptcy to trigger the automatic stay: A Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 filing usually stops most garnishments as soon as the case number is issued. Your attorney can notify the payroll department and the creditor the same day. Exceptions include domestic support obligations and certain government debts.
Will Chapter 7 stop wage garnishment, and how fast?
Yes, a Chapter 7 filing typically stops most wage garnishments immediately through the automatic stay. In urgent cases, it is possible to file quickly once required information and the pre-filing credit counseling are complete. Many employers stop withholding as soon as they receive notice, which can be the same day or within the next pay cycle. Timing depends on when you file, when notices go out, and your employer’s payroll schedule.
What about money already taken? Funds garnished before you file are usually gone to the creditor unless they were recently taken and meet strict recovery rules. In some cases, your attorney may pursue recovery of a limited amount that was garnished shortly before filing, but success varies and depends on timing, amounts, and local practice. Plan as if past withholdings will not come back. Focus on stopping the next one.
If you need help deciding between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 or want to move fast on a filing, you can learn more about Columbus, Ohio bankruptcy options and the automatic stay through these resources:
- Read about a Columbus Ohio bankruptcy overview and the automatic stay at the firm’s bankruptcy page
- If you anticipate a repayment plan might fit better, see how a Chapter 13 bankruptcy attorney in Columbus Ohio can help
- For urgent wage issues, connect with a Columbus garnishment lawyer to discuss stopping the garnishment
- Chapter 7: Fast relief for dischargeable unsecured debts like credit cards, medical bills, and many collection accounts. Typical timeline is about 3 to 4 months from filing to discharge in a straightforward case. You must pass the means test and consider non-exempt property issues.
- Chapter 13: A 3 to 5 year repayment plan that also stops garnishments with the automatic stay. Useful if you are over the Chapter 7 income threshold, need to catch up mortgage or car arrears, or want to manage tax debt under a court-approved plan.
Both chapters usually stop most wage garnishments right away. The better choice depends on your income, assets, and goals.
Simple scripts for urgent calls
- To your employer’s payroll or HR: “Hi, I just filed bankruptcy in the Southern District of Ohio. My case number is [number]. The automatic stay stops wage garnishments. I will email or fax the notice as soon as I receive it. Where should I send it so you can update payroll before the next check?”
- To the collector or creditor’s lawyer: “Hello, I received a wage garnishment on case [case number]. I am working on a resolution and expect to file bankruptcy shortly. Please provide your fax or email so my attorney can send the case number as soon as it is filed. If there are forms to pause the garnishment in the meantime, let me know.”
Keep the calls short and factual. Do not admit liability or promise payments you cannot make.
Same-week filing checklist
If stopping the garnishment fast is the priority, gather these items right away. Many of these are required to file a complete or emergency case:
- Government-issued photo ID and a document showing your Social Security number
- Last 6 months of pay stubs or income proof (include benefits, gig work, or business income)
- Last 2 years of federal tax returns, or an explanation if not filed
- Recent bank statements for all accounts
- A complete list of creditors, collection agencies, lawsuits, and garnishments (include account numbers and addresses if available)
- A list of assets: real estate, vehicles, bank and retirement accounts, household goods, tools, and any claims or potential lawsuits you might have
- A basic monthly budget: rent or mortgage, utilities, food, transportation, insurance, child care, medical costs, and other essentials
- Completed pre-filing credit counseling certificate (required before filing)
With this information ready, your attorney can evaluate Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13, run the means test, and move quickly to file.
FAQ: quick answers
- How to stop a garnishment in Ohio?
- Negotiate a payment plan, file an objection or claim of exemption, request hardship relief, or file bankruptcy to trigger the automatic stay. The stay is often the fastest way for most consumer debts.
- Will Chapter 7 stop wage garnishment?
- Typically yes. The automatic stay takes effect as soon as you file and usually stops most wage garnishments right away, except for certain debts like child support.
- What is exempt from garnishment in Ohio?
- Social Security, SSI, many pensions and retirement funds, veterans benefits, unemployment and workers compensation, support you receive, and the portion of wages protected by law. Many household goods and a vehicle equity amount are protected by Ohio exemptions.
- Can a garnishment be stopped once started?
- Often yes. Negotiation, court objections, and bankruptcy can stop or reduce it. Timing matters, so act quickly.
- What is the best way to stop a garnishment?
- For speed and broad protection, bankruptcy is often the most reliable option. The right choice depends on your income, assets, type of debt, and goals.
Bottom line and next step
You have options, and speed helps. If a paycheck is already reduced or a bank account is frozen, you can often stop or limit further loss by acting today. Talk with a local attorney about your exact situation, deadlines, and whether Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 makes the most sense. For practical guidance on stopping a garnishment and using the automatic stay effectively, explore the firm’s Columbus bankruptcy resources here, or reach out to discuss your timeline and documents so you can protect your next paycheck.

Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Ohio: Do you qualify and what can you protect? When bills keep stacking up and collection calls do not stop, Chapter 7 bankruptcy can feel like a lifeline. It is designed to wipe out many unsecured debts and give you a fresh start. Yet most people worry about two things right away: will I qualify, and will I lose everything? This plain-English guide walks through how qualification works, what the automatic stay stops, how long a typical case takes, what debts survive bankruptcy, and what Ohio exemptions can protect in your home, car, household goods, and retirement. You will also find a simple step-by-step decision flow and a short myth-versus-fact section to calm common fears. If you want help running your exact means-test numbers and matching exemptions to your property, a quick consult with an experienced local attorney can make the difference between guessing and knowing. How Chapter 7 works in Ohio Chapter 7 is often called liquidation, but most Ohio filers keep all or nearly all property because of exemptions. There is no payment plan. Instead, a court-appointed trustee reviews your assets, applies Ohio exemptions, and, if there is non-exempt value, may sell that property to pay creditors. Most consumer cases are “no-asset,” meaning nothing is sold. The moment you file, the automatic stay goes into effect. That court order typically pauses lawsuits, wage garnishments, repossessions, foreclosure proceedings, and collection calls. Some actions have exceptions or require rapid follow-up, so quick filing can be important if a garnishment or sheriffs’ sale is looming. Do you qualify? The means test in simple terms Eligibility centers on the means test, a two-part income-and-expenses analysis set by federal law but applied using Ohio figures. Step 1: Compare your household’s current monthly income (the average of the past six full months) to the Ohio median for your household size. If you are below median, you generally qualify for Chapter 7. Step 2: If you are above median, you complete a detailed calculation that subtracts allowed expenses, secured debt payments, and certain actual costs. Many people who are above median still qualify after this calculation. What is the income limit for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Ohio? There is no single fixed dollar cap that applies to everyone. It depends on household size and changes periodically. The median income figures are updated several times a year. An attorney can plug in your current six-month average and household details to confirm where you land, including special adjustments for recent job loss, variable overtime, or separated spouses. What disqualifies me from bankruptcy? You may be ineligible for a Chapter 7 discharge if you received a prior Chapter 7 discharge within the last eight years, or a Chapter 13 discharge in the last six years with limited exceptions. A case can also be dismissed for abuse if the means test shows significant disposable income, or for bad faith such as fraud or hiding assets. Mandatory pre-filing credit counseling is also required; skipping it can get a case dismissed. What the automatic stay really does The automatic stay takes effect immediately upon filing the case. It typically stops: Wage garnishments and bank levies Repossessions and most foreclosures Collection calls, letters, and lawsuits It does not erase debts on its own; it pauses enforcement while the case moves forward. Creditors can ask the court to lift the stay in some situations, such as when payments on a car or home are far behind and there is no plan to catch up. If a sheriffs’ sale is scheduled, quick filing may be essential to stop it before the sale takes place. For local help using the stay to pause collections or a pending sale, you can speak with a Columbus automatic stay attorney at The Law Offices of Karen E. Hamilton . The team regularly files emergency cases when appropriate and explains the next steps clearly. Ohio exemptions: what you can protect Ohio law lets you shield specific amounts of equity in certain property categories. Highlights include: Home equity: Ohio’s homestead exemption protects a set amount of equity in your primary residence. Married filers who both own the home can often double this amount. Exact figures adjust for inflation, so verify current numbers before filing. Vehicles: You can protect equity up to the vehicle exemption amount in one or more cars. If a car has a loan, equity is the value minus the loan balance. Household goods: Furniture, clothing, appliances, electronics, and similar items are usually protected up to category limits that cover typical homes. Retirement: Tax-qualified retirement accounts like 401(k)s, 403(b)s, most IRAs up to federal caps, and pensions are generally protected in full. Do not cash out retirement to pay debts before you get advice, because withdrawing funds can convert protected money into non-exempt cash. Ohio also offers a wildcard exemption that can protect extra value in items that might otherwise be partially exposed. Smart exemption planning is one of the biggest ways an attorney protects your property in Chapter 7. What debts are and are not discharged Chapter 7 typically wipes out unsecured debts such as credit cards, medical bills, personal loans, old utility balances, and many collection accounts. Some debts survive: Recent income taxes and certain other tax debts Domestic support obligations like child support and alimony Most student loans unless you win a separate undue hardship case Debts from fraud, willful and malicious injury, or certain criminal penalties Debts you choose to reaffirm, such as a car loan you are keeping and paying What debt cannot be forgiven in bankruptcy? The items above are the common categories that usually remain after discharge. What will I lose if I file? Most Ohio Chapter 7 filers do not lose anything because exemptions cover their property. If you have non-exempt equity, the trustee may sell that item and pay creditors, or you may be able to buy back the non-exempt portion. Many people keep cars and homes by staying current and, when needed, signing a reaffirmation agreement. If you are behind on a mortgage but want to keep the home, Chapter 13 may be a better fit because it lets you catch up over time. Timeline: how long Chapter 7 takes From filing to discharge, a routine Chapter 7 usually takes about 3 to 4 months: File your petition and complete the required credit counseling. About 30 to 45 days later, attend the 341 meeting of creditors, a short, non-adversarial meeting with the trustee. If no objections or asset issues arise, you receive a discharge roughly 60 days after the 341 meeting. Complete your debtor education course before discharge. How long does it take to get through Chapter 7? Most cases close in a few months, but asset administration, objections, or reaffirmation issues can extend the timeline. A simple decision flow, start to finish Qualify: Run the means test and confirm eligibility. Documents: Gather pay stubs, tax returns, bank statements, bills, and a full debt list. Filing: Complete credit counseling, file your case, and trigger the automatic stay. 341 meeting: Attend your trustee meeting with proper ID and Social Security documentation. Discharge: Finish debtor education, receive the discharge order, and begin credit rebuilding. If you are in Central or Southern Ohio, you can get help with bankruptcy petition preparation in Columbus or discuss a same-day over-the-phone Chapter 7 filing in urgent situations when appropriate. Myths versus facts Myth: You will lose everything. Fact: Ohio exemptions usually protect the basics, and many cases are no-asset. Myth: High income means you cannot file. Fact: Many above-median households still pass the means test after allowed expenses. Myth: Bankruptcy ruins credit forever. Fact: Credit can often be rebuilt with time and consistent habits after discharge. Myth: All taxes and student loans go away. Fact: Many do not, and student loans require a separate hardship process. Quick FAQ What is the income limit for Chapter 7 in Ohio? There is no single number. Eligibility depends on the Ohio median for your household size and the second stage of the means test. Figures change, so have a professional calculate your six-month average and allowed expenses. What debt cannot be forgiven? Domestic support, many recent taxes, most student loans, debts from fraud or intentional harm, criminal fines, and any debt you reaffirm. What will I lose if I file? Most filers lose nothing due to Ohio exemptions. Non-exempt equity may be at risk, but buy-back options sometimes exist. What can disqualify me? A recent bankruptcy discharge within the waiting period, failing the means test with significant disposable income, evidence of fraud or concealment, or skipping required counseling or documents. How long does Chapter 7 take? Typically 3 to 4 months from filing to discharge in a straightforward, no-asset case. The bottom line and a next step Chapter 7 in Ohio can relieve heavy debt while protecting your home equity, car, household goods, and retirement within generous exemption limits. The keys are accurate means-test calculations, careful exemption planning, and timely filing to effectively use the automatic stay. If you want clear, local guidance, consider a short consultation to review your documents and run your exact numbers. The Law Offices of Karen E. Hamilton serves Columbus, Marysville, Delaware, London, Mt. Sterling, Grove City, and Washington Court House. You can connect with a Chapter 7 bankruptcy attorney in Columbus, Ohio, or schedule Chapter 7 bankruptcy consultations in Columbus through the firm’s site.
