Garnishment

What a garnishment is in payroll, how it affects employee pay, and why payroll must treat it as a required deduction.

Garnishment

A garnishment is a required payroll deduction taken from an employee’s pay to satisfy a legally enforced payment obligation.

In payroll, the important point is that the deduction is not optional. Once the employer has a valid garnishment to process, payroll must handle it according to the applicable rules instead of treating it like a normal employee-elected deduction.

Why Garnishment Matters

Garnishment matters because it affects:

  • the employee’s net pay
  • payroll setup and deduction controls
  • employer recordkeeping and remittance duties
  • payroll review when multiple required deductions interact

It can also create employee questions quickly because the reduction may appear large or unfamiliar on the pay stub if the employee was not expecting it.

Where It Appears In Payroll Workflow

A garnishment usually enters payroll after the employer receives an order or instruction requiring the deduction. In practice, payroll may:

  • review the garnishment notice
  • set up the deduction in the payroll system
  • apply the reduction in the payroll run
  • show it on the pay stub and payroll register
  • track the amount for the required remittance process

Payroll must keep the garnishment distinct from ordinary tax withholding and voluntary deductions because it follows a different operational path.

Simple Example

An employee’s payroll run includes a required garnishment amount.

Payroll reduces the employee’s pay by that amount, records it as a required deduction, and tracks it for the proper remittance process. The employee’s net pay is lower because the garnishment came out before payment was released.

Common Confusion

Garnishment is often confused with:

  • Voluntary deduction, which the employee chose
  • Involuntary deduction, which is the broader category that can include garnishments
  • Levy, which is a specific kind of required payroll collection rather than another word for every garnishment
  • Withholding, which usually refers to payroll tax amounts

Knowledge Check

  1. Is a garnishment usually a required payroll deduction? Yes. That is the core payroll meaning.
  2. Can a garnishment reduce the employee’s net pay? Yes. It lowers the final amount paid to the employee.
  3. Is a garnishment the same as a voluntary benefit deduction? No. Payroll treats garnishments as required deductions, not employee elections.