Receiving notice that the IRS is garnishing your wages can feel like financial freefall. Unlike a bank levy, which is a one-time seizure, an IRS wage garnishment is continuous. Once it begins, it remains in place every pay period until:
However, one of the most misunderstood aspects of IRS levies is this:
The IRS cannot take your entire paycheck.
Federal law requires the IRS to leave you with a protected “exempt amount” to cover basic living expenses.
Understanding how this protected amount works in 2026 is critical to budgeting, negotiating, and stopping the garnishment as quickly as possible.
The IRS has statutory authority to garnish wages under:
Unlike most creditors, the IRS does not need a court judgment to garnish your paycheck. After issuing a Final Notice of Intent to Levy, they can proceed if you fail to respond within 30 days.
Once active, your employer must send a large portion of your paycheck directly to the U.S. Treasury each pay cycle.
To determine how much of your wages are protected, the IRS uses:
This publication contains exemption tables based on:
The exempt amount is derived from the standard deduction and inflation adjustments.
Below are estimated exempt amounts for bi-weekly pay periods, based on 2026 projections from Publication 1494 tables.
This higher exemption reflects household support obligations.
Single taxpayers with no dependents face the lowest protection threshold, which often results in higher garnishment rates.
Yes.
Supplemental wages—including:
…are typically not fully protected by exemption tables and may be levied at higher effective rates.
Scenario:
IRS Garnishment:
$2,400 − $668.26 = $1,731.74 seized every pay period
That equals:
Without intervention, wage levies can quickly erode financial stability.
If your wages are being levied, time is critical. The longer a garnishment runs, the harder financial recovery becomes.
At Wolf Tax, we help taxpayers: