Wyoming Bankruptcy Exemptions
When a Wyoming debtor files, the first question a creditor faces is simple: what can actually be reached, and what is locked away by statute? Wyoming is an opt-out state with its own exemption scheme, and in 2023 it raised the homestead cap five-fold. This guide lays out the current Wyoming figures from the primary statutes, explains what those caps mean for collection, and shows how a public-records research firm helps you locate the debtor and the non-exempt assets a filing does not protect.
The Short Version
Wyoming “opted out” of the federal bankruptcy exemptions, so a debtor domiciled in the state must use Wyoming’s own list. The headline numbers, taken from the current statutes: a homestead exemption of one hundred thousand dollars in home equity per resident owner under Wyo. Stat. 1-20-101, doubling where two co-owners occupy the same residence; a motor-vehicle exemption of five thousand dollars under 1-20-106; household articles up to four thousand dollars and tools of trade up to four thousand dollars under 1-20-106; necessary wearing apparel up to two thousand dollars under 1-20-105; and the federal wage formula protecting seventy-five percent of disposable earnings. There is no general wildcard. Equity above those caps, and assets outside them, can still be reachable. We are a public-records research firm: we locate the debtor and identify the non-exempt assets so your counsel can act. This is general legal information, not legal advice.
Watch: Wyoming Exemptions for Creditors
What the caps protect, and what they leave exposed.
Watch Overview
Wyoming Is an Opt-Out State
The debtor does not get to pick the federal list.
The federal Bankruptcy Code offers a menu of exemptions in 11 U.S.C. 522(d), but it lets each state “opt out” and require its residents to use the state’s own scheme instead. Wyoming did exactly that. Under Wyo. Stat. 1-20-109, the federal Section 522(d) exemptions are not authorized for a debtor whose domicile has been in Wyoming for the one hundred eighty days before the petition is filed. In plain terms: a Wyoming filer must use Wyoming’s exemptions, not the federal ones.
That matters to a creditor for a practical reason. In states that allow the federal set, debtors often combine a generous federal “wildcard” with other categories to shield property that would otherwise be reachable. Wyoming has no general wildcard exemption. A Wyoming debtor protects only what the specific statutory categories cover, up to the specific dollar caps below. Anything above a cap, or in a category the statutes do not protect, is potentially part of the bankruptcy estate and within reach of the trustee or a judgment creditor. Knowing the exact lines is the difference between writing off a debt and recovering on it.
The Current Wyoming Caps
Figures from the Wyoming statutes, in effect for 2026.
| Exemption | Wyoming Cap | Statute | Note for Creditors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Homestead | One hundred thousand dollars in equity, per resident owner | Wyo. Stat. 1-20-101 | Doubles where two co-owners occupy the home; equity above the cap is reachable. |
| Motor Vehicle | Five thousand dollars | 1-20-106(a)(iv) | One vehicle; a paid-off truck above this value carries non-exempt equity. |
| Household Articles | Four thousand dollars | 1-20-106(a)(iii) | Furniture, bedding, provisions the debtor selects, in total. |
| Tools of Trade | Four thousand dollars | 1-20-106(b) | Tools, team, implements, or stock in trade used to earn a living. |
| Wearing Apparel | Two thousand dollars | 1-20-105 | Necessary clothing only; not collections or luxury goods. |
| Wages | Seventy-five percent of disposable earnings | 1-15-408 | The federal floor; most paychecks are largely protected. |
| Wildcard | None | — | No catch-all to shield miscellaneous assets. |
These are the figures that decide most consumer cases. Note what is missing: there is no Wyoming wildcard, and the caps are modest compared to states with six-figure personal-property allowances. The big mover is the homestead, which the legislature raised from twenty thousand dollars to one hundred thousand dollars in 2023, a five-fold jump that took many out-of-date guides by surprise.
The Homestead, in Detail
The single most important number in a Wyoming case.
Wyo. Stat. 1-20-101 entitles every resident of the state to a homestead “not exceeding one hundred thousand dollars in value,” exempt from execution and attachment on debts and civil obligations. That equity figure replaced the long-standing twenty-thousand-dollar cap when the legislature passed the increase that took effect in 2023, the largest exemption change Wyoming has made in years. For a creditor relying on an older chart, this is the trap: a debtor who would have had reachable home equity under the old cap may now be fully protected.
The exemption is per qualifying person, not per house. Where two or more people jointly own and occupy the same residence, each is entitled to the homestead, so a married couple who both own and live in the home can shield up to two hundred thousand dollars of equity combined. The protection covers a house and the land it sits on, and Wyoming extends a comparable allowance to a mobile home or house trailer occupied as a residence. The cap is on equity, not on market value: a home worth far more than the protected amount still leaves non-exempt equity above the line once the mortgage and the homestead are subtracted. That gap is exactly what a trustee or judgment creditor evaluates, and exactly why an accurate read on what the debtor owns and owes matters before anyone writes the debt off.
Personal Property Caps
What the statute protects beyond the home.
Motor Vehicle
One motor vehicle is exempt up to five thousand dollars in value. A debtor with a financed car near that equity is usually fully covered, but a paid-off vehicle worth more than the cap carries non-exempt equity a trustee can pursue.
Household Articles
Furniture, bedding, provisions, and other household articles the debtor selects are exempt up to four thousand dollars in total. Ordinary furnishings rarely exceed this; high-value items can push above it.
Tools of Trade
The tools, team, implements, or stock in trade a person uses to earn a living are exempt up to four thousand dollars. Relevant for tradespeople, ranchers, and the self-employed; commercial equipment above the cap is exposed.
Wearing Apparel
Necessary wearing apparel is exempt up to two thousand dollars in value. The protection is for ordinary clothing, not jewelry collections, designer items, or other luxury goods, which fall outside the category.
Wages
Wyoming follows the federal wage-garnishment formula: the greater of seventy-five percent of disposable weekly earnings, or thirty times the federal minimum hourly wage, is protected from garnishment. The unprotected slice is narrow.
Retirement
Qualified retirement plans and pensions are broadly protected under both federal law and Wyoming statute. These accounts are generally off the table, which pushes the analysis toward non-exempt equity and transferred assets.
What a Filing Does Not Protect
The gaps where a creditor still has room to move.
Equity Above a Cap
Home equity over the homestead, or a vehicle worth more than the motor-vehicle cap, leaves a non-exempt slice the estate can reach.
Second Properties
The homestead covers one occupied residence. A rental, vacation home, or vacant lot is not homestead property and is potentially reachable.
No Wildcard Cover
With no catch-all exemption, cash, securities, collectibles, and miscellaneous assets that fit no listed category are exposed.
Transfers Before Filing
Assets moved to relatives or shells shortly before filing can be unwound as fraudulent transfers, putting the property back within reach.
Non-Dischargeable Debts
Domestic support, many tax debts, and obligations tied to fraud survive discharge. The debtor still owes them after the case closes.
Business Interests
Ownership in an LLC or company, accounts receivable, and equipment above the tool cap are not personal exemptions and can be pursued.
How We Help Creditors
Locate the debtor, surface the non-exempt assets.
Send What You Have
A name, last known address, the case number, or a judgment. Whatever you hold becomes the starting point for the research.
We Locate
A current address and employer are rebuilt from public records and licensed databases, so the debtor can be found and served where required.
We Map Assets
Real property, vehicles, business filings, and recent transfers are pulled and compared against the Wyoming caps to flag the non-exempt slice.
You Act
Your attorney files a proof of claim, objects to an improper exemption, or pursues a transfer. We hand over a documented, sourced report.
Who We Help
We do the research; your counsel acts on it.
Creditors
Non-exempt assets identified
Collections Firms
Debtors located for recovery
Judgment Holders
Property mapped for enforcement
Bankruptcy Attorneys
Exemption claims tested
Trustees
Estate assets traced
Small-Business Lenders
Borrower assets reviewed
Whoever you are, the bottleneck is the same: you cannot collect on what you cannot find, and you cannot challenge an exemption you have not verified. We locate the debtor through professional skip tracing and surface the property record, then flag the equity and transfers that the Wyoming caps do not cover. The work pairs naturally with our guides on finding hidden assets and asset searches for judgment collection, the related Wyoming wage-garnishment rules, and neighboring exemption breakdowns for Idaho and New Mexico. We are a public-records research firm, not a law firm and not a credit-reporting agency; for a legitimate, permissible-purpose matter a verified locate typically comes back within 24 hours.
Our Commitment
We give you an accurate, sourced read on a Wyoming debtor: where they are, what they own, and which of it the exemption caps do not protect. Lawful, documented public-records research for creditors, attorneys, and judgment holders since 2004.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a Wyoming debtor use the federal bankruptcy exemptions?
No. Wyoming opted out under Wyo. Stat. 1-20-109, so a debtor domiciled in the state for the one hundred eighty days before filing must use Wyoming’s own exemptions, not the federal Section 522(d) list. This is general legal information, not legal advice.
What is the current Wyoming homestead exemption?
Wyo. Stat. 1-20-101 protects up to one hundred thousand dollars of home equity per resident owner. The legislature raised it from twenty thousand dollars effective in 2023. Two co-owners who occupy the same home can each claim it, for up to two hundred thousand dollars combined.
How much vehicle equity is protected?
One motor vehicle is exempt up to five thousand dollars in value under Wyo. Stat. 1-20-106. A financed car near that equity is usually covered, but a paid-off vehicle worth more than the cap carries non-exempt equity that can be reached.
Does Wyoming have a wildcard exemption?
No. Wyoming has no general wildcard, so a debtor cannot use a catch-all to shield cash, securities, or miscellaneous assets that fall outside the specific statutory categories. That absence is a meaningful opening for creditors compared to many other states.
How much of a paycheck can be garnished in Wyoming?
Wyoming follows the federal formula under Wyo. Stat. 1-15-408: the greater of seventy-five percent of disposable weekly earnings, or thirty times the federal minimum hourly wage, is protected. Only the remaining slice is reachable by garnishment.
What assets stay reachable after a Wyoming filing?
Equity above any cap, second properties, business interests, accounts receivable, and assets in no listed category remain part of the estate. Transfers made shortly before filing can also be unwound as fraudulent. We help identify those non-exempt items.
Do you provide legal advice on exemptions?
No. We are a public-records research firm, not a law firm or a credit-reporting agency. We locate debtors and document assets; decisions about objecting to an exemption or pursuing a claim belong to a licensed Wyoming bankruptcy attorney.
How fast can you locate a Wyoming debtor, and what do you need?
For a legitimate, permissible-purpose matter, a verified locate typically comes back within 24 hours. Send whatever you have, such as a name, last known address, case number, or judgment, and we build the research from there.
Need to Locate a Wyoming Debtor?
We find the debtor and surface the assets the Wyoming exemption caps do not protect, with a documented, sourced report your counsel can act on, typically within 24 hours. Contact us to get started.
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