IRS Wage Garnishment: How to Stop It Fast in 2026
The IRS can take up to 75% of your paycheck. Learn the fastest ways to stop an IRS wage levy and protect your income.
IRS Wage Garnishment: How to Stop It Fast in 2026
An IRS wage levy (commonly called wage garnishment) is one of the most aggressive collection actions the IRS takes. Unlike regular creditor garnishments limited to 25%, the IRS can take a much larger portion of your paycheck.
How Much Can the IRS Take?
The IRS uses a formula based on your filing status and number of dependents. For many single taxpayers with no dependents, the IRS can take up to 75% or more of their disposable income. The exempt amount (what you keep) is calculated using IRS Publication 1494.
Example for a Single Taxpayer (2026)
If you earn $4,000 per pay period (bi-weekly):
- Exempt amount: approximately $1,000 (varies by filing status)
- Amount levied: approximately $3,000
- That is 75% of your paycheck, gone
Timeline Before a Wage Levy
The IRS follows a specific process before levying wages:
- Assessment: IRS assesses the tax and sends a bill (CP14)
- Reminder notices: CP501, CP503, CP504
- Final Notice of Intent to Levy (LT11 or CP90): This is your last chance. You have 30 days to appeal
- Levy issued: Sent directly to your employer
The entire process typically takes 4-6 months from the first notice.
7 Ways to Stop an IRS Wage Levy
1. Pay the Full Balance
Immediate release. The IRS must release the levy within 24 hours of payment.
2. Installment Agreement
Setting up a payment plan will release the levy. Even a pending installment agreement (Form 9465 submitted) can trigger a release.
3. Offer in Compromise
Filing a processable OIC (with the $205 application fee and initial payment) stops levy action. Processing takes months, giving you significant breathing room.
4. Currently Not Collectible (CNC)
Proving economic hardship gets the levy released and stops future collection activity. You will need to provide:
- Bank statements (3 months)
- Pay stubs (3 months)
- Monthly expense documentation
- Asset information
5. Collection Due Process (CDP) Hearing
If you received a Final Notice within the past 30 days, request a CDP hearing immediately. This halts all collection activity while the hearing is pending.
6. Bankruptcy Filing
Filing a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy triggers an automatic stay that stops all IRS collection activity, including wage levies.
7. Prove the Levy is Creating Hardship
If the levy is preventing you from meeting basic living expenses, contact the IRS or the Taxpayer Advocate Service to request a levy release due to hardship.
How Fast Can You Stop a Levy?
| Method | Timeline |
|---|---|
| Full payment | Same day |
| Installment agreement | 1-5 business days |
| CNC/Hardship | 1-7 business days |
| CDP Hearing request | Immediate (if within 30 days) |
| Offer in Compromise | 1-2 weeks |
| Bankruptcy | Immediate upon filing |
What to Do Right Now
- Do not ignore notices: The earlier you act, the more options you have
- Gather financial documents: Bank statements, pay stubs, expense records
- Contact a tax professional: An experienced EA or CPA can often get a levy released within days
- File all unfiled returns: The IRS will not negotiate if you are not in filing compliance
Find Help Today
An IRS wage levy is an emergency. Find a tax relief expert near you who can act quickly to protect your income.
Do not wait for your next paycheck to be reduced. Get started now.
About Michael Chen
Former IRS agent turned tax advocate, specializing in audit defense and tax resolution.