IRS Wage Garnishment: What Taxpayers Should Know
IRS wage garnishment is one of the most immediate enforcement tools the federal government uses to collect unpaid tax debt directly from a taxpayer's paycheck. This page covers how the IRS initiates wage garnishment, what exemptions apply, how the process unfolds step by step, and under what conditions garnishment can be stopped or reduced. Understanding the mechanics is essential for any taxpayer facing enforced collection action.
Definition and Scope
IRS wage garnishment — formally classified as a continuous levy on wages, salary, and other income — is authorized under 26 U.S.C. § 6331 of the Internal Revenue Code. Unlike a one-time bank levy, a wage garnishment remains in effect with each pay period until the tax liability is resolved or the IRS releases the levy.
The IRS distinguishes wage garnishment from other levy types on a structural basis:
- Continuous levy (wages): Attaches automatically to each paycheck until released; governed by IRC § 6331(e).
- One-time levy (bank accounts, accounts receivable): Seizes funds present at the moment of levy and does not repeat automatically. See bank levy IRS process and taxpayer rights for comparison.
- Federal payment levy program (FPLP): A continuous 15% levy on certain federal payments, including Social Security benefits, administered through coordination between the IRS and the Bureau of the Fiscal Service (IRS, Federal Payment Levy Program).
The scope of IRS wage garnishment is national. Any employer or paying entity operating within U.S. jurisdiction is legally obligated to comply with an IRS levy notice served on them. Non-compliance by an employer can expose that employer to liability equal to the amount that should have been withheld (IRC § 6332).
How It Works
The IRS follows a defined procedural sequence before executing a wage levy. The IRS Collection Process (Publication 594) outlines the general framework:
- Assessment and notice: The IRS assesses a tax liability and sends a Notice and Demand for Payment (IRC § 6303).
- Failure to pay: The taxpayer does not pay the amount owed within the prescribed period.
- Final notice — Intent to Levy: The IRS issues a CP504 Notice (intent to seize state tax refunds) and then a Letter 1058 or LT11, which constitutes the legally required Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing. This triggers the 30-day window during which a taxpayer may request a Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing.
- Employer notification: If no resolution is reached, the IRS serves Form 668-W (Notice of Levy on Wages, Salary, and Other Income) directly on the employer.
- Withholding begins: The employer calculates the exempt amount using the table in IRS Publication 1494, withholds the non-exempt portion, and remits it to the IRS each pay period.
- Continuation: The levy continues automatically. The employer is not released until the IRS issues a Form 668-D (Release of Levy).
Exempt amount calculation: Publication 1494 sets the exempt amount based on the taxpayer's filing status and number of claimed dependents. For a single taxpayer claiming one personal exemption paid weekly, the exempt amount is determined by a published table updated annually by the IRS. The non-exempt remainder is remitted to the IRS.
The employer receives no discretion in this process. Compliance is mandatory upon receipt of Form 668-W.
Common Scenarios
Wage garnishment arises across a range of taxpayer situations. The four most frequently encountered are:
1. Unfiled or underreported returns with a balance due
Taxpayers who have not filed returns may receive a Substitute for Return (SFR) prepared by the IRS, which typically produces a higher tax liability than a self-prepared return. The resulting balance becomes collectible and can trigger levy action.
2. Failed or lapsed installment agreements
A taxpayer in default on an approved installment agreement loses the levy protection that accompanies an active agreement. The IRS may immediately resume collection, including wage levy, upon default.
3. Self-employed taxpayers with payroll tax debt
Sole proprietors and S-corporation owners with unpaid 941 payroll tax obligations face garnishment of any W-2 wages from other employment. Payroll tax debt, including Trust Fund Recovery Penalty assessments, is among the highest-priority collection targets in the IRS enforcement framework.
4. Taxpayers who ignored CDP hearing rights
A taxpayer who did not respond to Letter 1058 within 30 days loses CDP rights for that tax period. This forecloses certain legal challenges and leaves fewer procedural options to delay or contest the levy.
Decision Boundaries
Several legal mechanisms can stop, reduce, or release an IRS wage garnishment. Each has distinct eligibility criteria:
| Resolution Pathway | Effect on Levy | Governing Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Installment Agreement | Levy release required upon acceptance (IRC § 6343) | IRS Collection Standards |
| Offer in Compromise | Levy held during processing; released if accepted | IRC § 7122 |
| Currently Not Collectible Status | Levy released; account placed in hardship deferral | IRM 5.16.1 |
| CDP Hearing Request | Levy suspended during pending hearing | IRC § 6330 |
| Bankruptcy Filing | Automatic stay halts levy temporarily | 11 U.S.C. § 362 |
| Statute of Limitations Expiry | Collection authority lapses | IRC § 6502 |
Key contrasts among pathways:
- An Offer in Compromise requires demonstrating either doubt as to collectibility, doubt as to liability, or effective tax administration — a higher evidentiary threshold than establishing a payment plan.
- Currently Not Collectible status does not eliminate the debt; it suspends collection while interest and penalties continue to accrue.
- A CDP hearing request filed within 30 days of the Final Notice suspends levy action, but a request filed after 30 days (as an "equivalent hearing") does not carry the same suspension right (IRC § 6330(b)).
- The Collection Statute Expiration Date (CSED) generally runs 10 years from the date of assessment (IRC § 6502), but tolling events — including bankruptcy, CDP hearings, and pending OIC — extend this window.
Taxpayers navigating these boundaries benefit from understanding the IRS Fresh Start Program, which expanded OIC eligibility criteria and streamlined installment agreement thresholds. The Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS), an independent organization within the IRS, can intervene in cases where levy action is causing economic hardship and normal IRS channels have not resolved the issue.
Determining which pathway applies depends on the taxpayer's current income, asset position, outstanding liability, and whether any prior agreements or proceedings have affected the CSED.