What a child support garnishment means in payroll, how it affects pay, and why payroll treats it as a required deduction.
A child support garnishment is a required payroll deduction taken from employee pay to satisfy child support obligations under the applicable payroll instruction or order.
In payroll, it is treated as a required deduction, not a voluntary employee election. The employer’s payroll team must process it according to the instruction received and track it as part of the payroll deduction workflow.
Child support garnishment matters because it affects:
It is also a practical term many employees and payroll administrators encounter directly, which is why the payroll explanation should stay plain and process-focused rather than drifting into legal advice.
Child support garnishment enters payroll after the employer receives the required payroll instruction. In practice, payroll may:
The exact rules depend on the payroll context, but the payroll role stays consistent: this is a required deduction from employee pay.
An employee’s payroll run includes a child support garnishment deduction.
Payroll applies the required reduction, lowers the employee’s net pay accordingly, and records the amount for the proper payroll follow-up. The employee did not choose the deduction, which is why payroll treats it differently from a voluntary deduction.
Child support garnishment is often confused with: