American families are carrying more debt than at any point in the nation’s history. As debt collection lawsuits climb back to pre-pandemic highs, millions face a little-known but devastating risk: the legal seizure of their entire bank accounts, sometimes overnight.
Household debt exceeded $18 trillion as of September 2025, with credit card balances alone rising by $24 billion in a single quarter, according to the National Consumer Law Center’s (NCLC) February 2026 report, “Safe Deposits: How to Protect Family Bank Accounts from Debt Collectors.” Each new collection lawsuit exposes families not only to wage garnishment but to the freezing and draining of checking accounts that often contain rent money, grocery funds, and a worker’s most recent paycheck.
“Seizure of a family’s bank account balance can be devastating for families that are confronted with the harsh reality that the money they’ve set aside for rent, food, utilities, and other basic necessities is gone,” said Carolyn Carter, senior attorney at NCLC and co-author of the report.
In most states, once a creditor wins a court judgment, it can initiate what is commonly called a bank account garnishment. Once a bank receives the paperwork, it is generally required to freeze the account immediately, blocking access to funds even if some portion is legally exempt. Outstanding checks bounce. Debit transactions fail. Families can be left without access to food or transportation within days.
Federal law provides limited protection, requiring banks to safeguard two months of electronically deposited Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, and veterans’ benefits. But wages, pensions outside Social Security, and most other deposits receive no automatic federal protection.
The NCLC report assigns grades to states based on how well their exemption laws protect families from wage and asset seizures. States that protect less than $500 in a bank account receive an “F.” States that offer moderate protections without automatic safeguards typically earn a “C.” States providing meaningful, self-executing protections in the $1,000 to $3,000 range receive higher marks. The grading system reveals a fractured national landscape where a family’s financial survival may depend largely on geography.
Arkansas, for example, effectively protects nothing in a bank account after accounting for competing uses of its minimal wildcard exemption, earning an “F.” Alabama receives a “C” because its wildcard exemption can theoretically protect funds but is not automatic and requires affirmative action by the debtor. By contrast, states such as California and Massachusetts receive higher grades for enacting self-executing protections that require banks to leave a defined amount untouched.
The difference between paper protections and automatic protections is more than technical. In many states without self-executing laws, consumers must navigate dense court paperwork under severe time pressure. In Nebraska, for example, debtors have only three business days to file a claim of exemption. Other states require consumers to itemize and value all personal property before asserting protection—an exercise many cannot complete without legal assistance.
A vivid example appears in New Mexico’s writ of garnishment form. The document instructs the garnishee bank to hold funds, notify the debtor, and include a separate notice of the right to claim exemptions. The debtor must then complete and submit a formal claim under oath, triggering potential hearings. Failure to respond correctly can result in funds being turned over in full. For families already in financial distress, the procedural complexity alone can be overwhelming.
Weak exemption laws also compound racial economic disparities. Research cited in the report shows that communities of color face higher rates of debt in collections, more frequent lawsuits, and more garnishments per judgment than majority-white communities. In Michigan, collection filings in majority Black communities were two to three times higher than in majority white communities. A St. Louis study found a 40% higher rate of debt judgments in Black neighborhoods even after adjusting for income and credit scores.
The report’s central recommendation is straightforward: states should create a flat, self-executing exemption that automatically protects at least $3,000 in every bank account, without requiring the account holder to file paperwork. The protection should also be indexed to inflation to preserve its value over time.
“If the affordability crisis has taught us anything, it’s that many families are one unexpected event away from a financial crisis that can push them into a downward spiral of debt,” said Michael Best, director of state advocacy at NCLC. “Protecting up to $3,000 in a family’s bank account will stop families from being driven into homelessness by an old debt and periodically adjusting the protected amount for inflation will ensure the adequate protection of resources needed for a family’s survival.”
Thirteen states have implemented self-executing protections in some form, spanning diverse political and geographic regions. In these states, banks are required by statute, court rule, or standardized court forms to automatically leave a defined amount accessible. The report argues that this approach is not only feasible but administratively simpler for banks and courts alike.
With household debt at historic heights and collection activity accelerating, the mechanics of garnishment law are no longer obscure procedural details. They are determinants of whether a family can pay rent next month or fall into cascading financial crisis.
“The policy question before state legislatures is no longer theoretical,” one financial expert stated. “It is whether basic survival funds should remain shielded from immediate seizure.”

