New York Judgment Collection: Complete Guide to Collecting Judgments in NY
You won a judgment in New York—now you need to collect it. New York provides powerful collection tools under CPLR Article 52, including income executions, bank levies, property liens, and restraining notices. This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to know about collecting judgments in the Empire State.
📌 Key Takeaways
- NY judgments last 20 years—no renewal required for the judgment itself
- Wage garnishment limited to 10% of gross or 25% minus 30× minimum wage (whichever is less)
- Restraining notices freeze debtor assets at banks and other third parties
- Property liens must be renewed every 10 years
- First $3,600 in bank accounts may be exempt under NY’s income protection rules
- NYC Marshals and County Sheriffs handle enforcement
- Information subpoenas compel debtors to disclose assets
📑 Table of Contents
- NY Judgment Collection Overview
- Judgment Duration & Liens
- Income Execution (Wage Garnishment)
- Bank Account Levy
- Restraining Notices
- Property Execution
- Information Subpoenas
- New York Exemptions
- Sheriffs & Marshals
- Finding Your Debtor
- Small Claims Judgments
- Common Mistakes
- Negotiating with Debtors
- Out-of-State Judgments
- Frequently Asked Questions
Watch Overview⚖️ NY Judgment Collection Overview
New York’s judgment collection procedures are governed primarily by CPLR Article 52 (Civil Practice Law and Rules). The state provides creditors with several powerful tools, but also offers significant protections to debtors—particularly for wages and basic necessities.
Collection Tools Available in New York
Income Execution
NY’s version of wage garnishment. Served on employers to withhold a portion of the debtor’s wages each pay period.
Bank Levy
Seize funds from debtor’s bank accounts through execution served on financial institutions.
Restraining Notice
Freeze debtor’s assets held by third parties. Prevents banks, employers, and others from releasing debtor’s property.
Property Lien
Attach judgment to real estate. Debtor cannot sell or refinance without satisfying the lien.
Information Subpoena
Compel debtor or third parties to answer questions about assets and income under penalty of contempt.
Property Execution
Seize and sell debtor’s personal property including vehicles (subject to exemptions).
The Collection Process Flow
Obtain Your Judgment
Win your case in court (or obtain default judgment). The court clerk enters the judgment, making it enforceable.
File the Judgment
File a transcript of judgment with the County Clerk in any county where the debtor has property. This creates a lien on real property in that county.
Locate Debtor & Assets
Find the debtor’s current address, employer, bank accounts, and property. Skip tracing and asset searches provide this information.
Serve Restraining Notice
Freeze assets by serving restraining notices on banks, employers, or anyone holding debtor’s property.
Execute on Assets
Work with the Sheriff or Marshal to levy bank accounts, garnish wages, or seize property.
⏱️ Judgment Duration & Liens
New York is one of the most creditor-friendly states when it comes to judgment duration:
Judgment Validity
20 years from date of entry. No renewal required for the judgment itself to remain enforceable. After 20 years, you can apply to the court to extend enforcement.
Judgment Liens
10 years on real property. Must file an extension before expiration to maintain lien priority. File with County Clerk where property is located.
Post-Judgment Interest
New York judgments accrue interest at 9% per year (CPLR 5004). This interest compounds, significantly increasing the amount collectible over time:
| Original Judgment | After 5 Years | After 10 Years | After 20 Years |
|---|---|---|---|
| $10,000 | $14,500 | $19,000 | $28,000 |
| $25,000 | $36,250 | $47,500 | $70,000 |
| $50,000 | $72,500 | $95,000 | $140,000 |
💡 Interest Calculation
Interest accrues from the date of judgment entry (not from when the debt was incurred). Calculate using simple interest: Principal × 0.09 × Years. Courts also allow recovery of enforcement costs and fees in addition to judgment amount and interest.
💵 Income Execution (Wage Garnishment)
New York calls wage garnishment an “income execution.” It’s one of the most effective collection tools when the debtor is employed, but NY provides strong protections limiting the amount that can be taken.
How Much Can Be Garnished?
New York limits income execution to the lesser of:
- 10% of gross wages, OR
- 25% of disposable earnings minus 30 times the NY minimum wage
This is more protective than federal law, which allows 25% of disposable earnings or the amount exceeding 30× federal minimum wage.
Income Execution Example
| Gross Weekly Wages | 10% of Gross | Federal Would Allow | NY Allows (Lesser) |
|---|---|---|---|
| $600 | $60 | ~$100 | $60 |
| $1,000 | $100 | ~$175 | $100 |
| $1,500 | $150 | ~$275 | $150 |
| $2,000 | $200 | ~$400 | $200 |
Income Execution Process
Prepare the Income Execution
Complete the income execution form. Include judgment information, debtor details, and employer information.
Serve on Debtor First
In NY, you must serve the income execution on the debtor first, giving them 20 days to pay or arrange payment before serving the employer.
Serve on Employer
If debtor doesn’t pay within 20 days, serve the execution on their employer. Employer must begin withholding within the pay period.
Receive Payments
Employer sends garnished amounts to the Sheriff, who forwards to you (minus fees). Continues until judgment is satisfied.
⚠️ Priority Rules
If multiple creditors have income executions, they’re satisfied in order of delivery to the Sheriff. Child support and tax obligations take priority over general judgment creditors.
🏦 Bank Account Levy
Bank levies in New York can be highly effective for grabbing lump sums, but the process requires careful attention to NY’s exempt funds rules.
The Bank Levy Process
- Identify the bank: Skip tracing or information subpoenas can reveal where the debtor banks
- Serve restraining notice: Freeze the account before levy to prevent withdrawals
- Obtain execution: Get a property execution from the court
- Serve on bank: Sheriff or Marshal serves the execution on the bank
- Bank freezes account: Bank holds funds pending debtor’s exemption claims
- Exemption period: Debtor has 20 days to claim exemptions
- Funds released: Non-exempt funds released to satisfy judgment
Protected Bank Funds
New York provides significant protection for bank accounts containing exempt income:
🛡️ Exempt Funds in Bank Accounts
- $3,600 automatic exemption if account reasonably identifiable as containing exempt payments (wages, Social Security, etc.)
- 90% of wages for 60 days after deposit
- Social Security, SSI, Veterans benefits — fully exempt
- Unemployment benefits — fully exempt
- Public assistance — fully exempt
- Workers’ compensation — fully exempt
Banks must provide debtors with exemption claim forms and cannot release funds until the exemption period expires or debtor waives exemptions.
🔒 Restraining Notices
The restraining notice is one of New York’s most powerful collection tools. It freezes the debtor’s assets without requiring immediate Sheriff involvement.
What Restraining Notices Do
When served on someone holding the debtor’s property (bank, employer, brokerage, etc.), a restraining notice:
- Prohibits them from releasing any of the debtor’s property
- Requires them to hold assets pending further legal process
- Creates personal liability if they violate the notice
- Remains effective until satisfied, vacated, or 1 year expires
Serving Restraining Notices
Unlike executions, restraining notices can be served by:
- Sheriff or Marshal
- Any person not a party to the action (process server)
- Attorney for the judgment creditor
This makes restraining notices faster and cheaper than executions, which require Sheriff/Marshal involvement.
✅ Strategic Use of Restraining Notices
Serve restraining notices on all known banks simultaneously, then follow up with levies on accounts that have funds. This prevents the debtor from moving money while you process paperwork. The restraining notice freezes the account immediately upon service.
🏠 Property Execution
Real Property Liens
File a transcript of judgment with the County Clerk to create a lien on all real property the debtor owns in that county:
- Lien attaches automatically upon filing
- Debtor cannot sell or refinance without satisfying the lien
- Lien is valid for 10 years (renewable)
- Must file in each county where debtor owns property
Personal Property Execution
You can execute on the debtor’s personal property including:
- Vehicles (subject to $4,825 exemption for one vehicle)
- Business equipment and inventory
- Investment accounts and securities
- Valuable personal property
The Sheriff seizes and sells property at auction, applying proceeds to your judgment.
Homestead Exemption
New York’s homestead exemption protects equity in the debtor’s primary residence:
| Region | Exemption Amount |
|---|---|
| Kings, Queens, New York, Bronx, Richmond, Nassau, Suffolk, Rockland, Westchester, Putnam | $450,000 |
| Dutchess, Albany, Columbia, Orange, Saratoga, Ulster | $300,000 |
| All other counties | $179,975 |
⚠️ Homestead Considerations
Even with high homestead exemptions, filing a judgment lien is valuable. If the debtor sells or refinances, they must satisfy your lien from proceeds above the exemption. Real estate values may also push equity above the exemption limit.
📋 Information Subpoenas
If you don’t know what the debtor owns, New York’s information subpoena compels them to tell you.
What Information Subpoenas Cover
You can demand the debtor (or third parties) provide information about:
- Bank accounts (names, locations, account numbers)
- Employment (employer name, address, wages)
- Real property ownership
- Vehicle ownership
- Investment and brokerage accounts
- Business interests
- Income from all sources
- Assets transferred in recent years
Serving Information Subpoenas
Prepare the Subpoena
Include detailed questions about assets, income, and property. Use the official court forms as a starting point but add specific questions relevant to your case.
Serve on Debtor or Third Party
Serve personally or by mail. Third-party subpoenas (to banks, employers) require witness fee payment.
Response Due
Recipient has 7 days to respond (or longer if specified). Responses must be under oath.
Enforce if Ignored
If debtor fails to respond, move for contempt. Court can impose fines, jail, or both until compliance.
🛡️ New York Exemptions
New York provides substantial protections for debtors. Understanding exemptions helps you target collectible assets and avoid wasting effort on exempt property.
💵 Income Exemptions
- 90% of wages earned in past 60 days
- Social Security benefits — 100% exempt
- SSI (Supplemental Security Income) — 100% exempt
- Veterans benefits — 100% exempt
- Unemployment compensation — 100% exempt
- Public assistance — 100% exempt
- Workers’ compensation — 100% exempt
- Disability benefits — 100% exempt
- Pension and retirement funds — generally exempt
🏠 Property Exemptions
- Homestead: $179,975 – $450,000 (varies by county)
- Motor vehicle: $4,825 equity in one vehicle
- Household furniture: $13,950 total
- Clothing and personal items: No specific limit (necessary items)
- Tools of trade: $3,600
- Wedding ring: No limit
- Watch, jewelry, art: $1,850 total
- Cash and bank accounts: $3,600 if from exempt sources
👮 Sheriffs & Marshals
In New York, enforcement officers vary by location:
NYC: City Marshals
New York City uses City Marshals for civil enforcement. Marshals are private officers who collect fees based on the amount collected. They’re often faster than Sheriffs and have financial incentive to collect.
Fees: 5% poundage on amounts collected (capped at certain amounts)
Outside NYC: County Sheriffs
Outside NYC, County Sheriff’s Civil Division handles enforcement. Sheriffs charge fixed fees rather than percentages. Processing times vary by county workload.
Fees: Fixed fees for service, levy, etc. (varies by county)
Working with Enforcement Officers
- Provide complete information: Include debtor’s full name, address, and specific location of assets
- Pay fees promptly: Unpaid fees delay processing
- Follow up: Check status regularly, especially for income executions
- Multiple approaches: Use income execution AND property levy simultaneously when possible
🔍 Finding Your Debtor
All the collection tools in the world don’t help if you can’t find the debtor and their assets. Many judgment creditors struggle because:
- Debtor moved without forwarding address
- Debtor changed jobs and you don’t know where they work now
- Debtor’s assets are unknown or hidden
- Debtor is actively avoiding creditors
How Skip Tracing Helps
Professional skip tracing accesses restricted databases to reveal:
- Current address: Essential for serving restraining notices, executions, and subpoenas
- Employer information: Required for income execution—you need the employer’s name and address
- Phone numbers: For direct contact and negotiation attempts
- Relatives and associates: May reveal debtor’s whereabouts or provide contact leverage
How Asset Searches Help
Asset searches reveal what the debtor actually owns:
- Real property: File judgment transcripts with County Clerks in those counties
- Vehicles: Potential execution targets (subject to $4,825 exemption)
- Business interests: LLCs, corporations, and partnerships that may hold assets
- Employment: Critical for income execution
- Other judgments: See who else is competing for the same assets
Information You Need Before Enforcement
To efficiently collect your NY judgment, you should know:
- Debtor’s current address — for service of all legal documents
- Debtor’s employer — name and address for income execution
- Debtor’s banks — for restraining notices and levies
- Real property owned — for filing judgment transcripts
- Vehicles owned — potential execution targets
- Other assets — investments, business interests, valuable property
Without this information, you’re guessing—and guessing costs time and money on enforcement actions that go nowhere.
🔍 Find Your NY Debtor
Can’t collect because you can’t find them? Skip tracing locates debtors in New York and reveals current addresses, employers, and assets. Over 20 years of experience.
📝 Collecting Small Claims Judgments
Won a judgment in NY Small Claims Court? Collection follows the same CPLR Article 52 procedures, with some practical considerations:
Small Claims Court Limits
- NYC Civil Court: Up to $10,000 ($5,000 for businesses)
- District Courts (Nassau, Suffolk): Up to $5,000
- City Courts: Up to $5,000
- Town and Village Courts: Up to $3,000
After You Win
The court clerk can provide information about collecting your judgment, but they cannot collect for you. You’re responsible for:
- Locating the debtor
- Identifying their assets
- Filing the necessary paperwork
- Working with Sheriffs/Marshals for enforcement
Many small claims winners are surprised to learn that winning was the easy part—collection is where the real work begins.
Is It Worth Collecting Small Amounts?
Consider the economics:
| Judgment Amount | Typical Collection Costs | Net if Collected | Worth Pursuing? |
|---|---|---|---|
| $500 | $150-300 | $200-350 | Maybe (if debtor is employed) |
| $2,000 | $150-300 | $1,700-1,850 | Yes |
| $5,000 | $200-400 | $4,600-4,800 | Definitely |
| $10,000 | $200-500 | $9,500-9,800 | Absolutely |
Remember that NY judgments last 20 years and accrue 9% interest. Even if collection isn’t practical today, circumstances change.
⚠️ Common Collection Mistakes
Avoid these errors that cost NY judgment creditors time and money:
Mistake #1: Not Filing the Judgment Transcript
Your judgment doesn’t automatically create a lien. You must file a transcript with the County Clerk in each county where the debtor owns (or might acquire) property. Many creditors skip this step and lose lien priority to later creditors.
Mistake #2: Ignoring Exemptions
Attempting to levy fully exempt property wastes time and money. If the debtor’s only asset is a $3,000 car, the $4,825 vehicle exemption makes it uncollectible. Focus on non-exempt assets.
Mistake #3: Single Collection Method
Don’t rely solely on income execution. Use multiple tools simultaneously:
- Income execution for ongoing wage garnishment
- Restraining notices to freeze bank accounts
- Property liens for long-term security
- Information subpoenas to discover more assets
Mistake #4: Waiting Too Long
Debtors who owe money often continue accumulating debts. If you wait, other creditors may get priority. Assets may be spent or hidden. Act promptly after judgment.
Mistake #5: Insufficient Information
Filing paperwork without knowing where the debtor banks or works is shooting in the dark. Invest in skip tracing and asset searches before spending money on enforcement that goes nowhere.
Mistake #6: Accepting Partial Payments Without Agreement
If you accept partial payments, document that this doesn’t waive your right to collect the rest. Get payment agreements in writing. Otherwise, debtors sometimes argue the debt was settled.
🤝 Negotiating with Debtors
Sometimes negotiation beats litigation. Consider these approaches:
Lump Sum Settlement
Offer to accept less than the full judgment in exchange for immediate payment. This can make sense when:
- The debtor has limited assets
- Collection would be expensive or time-consuming
- You need funds now rather than over time
- The debtor might file bankruptcy
Common settlement ranges: 40-70% of the judgment amount, depending on circumstances.
Payment Plans
Structured payment plans work when the debtor has income but not lump sum capacity:
- Get the agreement in writing (stipulation)
- Include acceleration clause if payments are missed
- Consider having the court “so order” the stipulation for easier enforcement
- Maintain your enforcement rights if payments stop
Using Leverage
Your leverage increases when you have:
- Filed property liens (they can’t sell/refinance)
- Served restraining notices (accounts are frozen)
- Identified their employer (wage garnishment threat)
- Located valuable non-exempt assets
Often, the threat of enforcement motivates settlement better than actual enforcement.
🗽 Out-of-State Judgments
Have a judgment from another state against someone now in New York? You must domesticate it first:
Domesticating Foreign Judgments in NY
- Obtain certified copy: Get a certified copy of the judgment from the original state
- File with NY Clerk: File with the County Clerk in any NY county where enforcement is sought
- Affidavit required: File affidavit stating judgment is valid, not satisfied, and still enforceable
- Notice to debtor: Serve notice on debtor within 30 days of filing
- Judgment domesticated: NY treats it as a NY judgment for enforcement purposes
New York has adopted the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, making domestication relatively straightforward.
💡 Domestication Timing
Domesticate your judgment as soon as you learn the debtor has moved to New York. The 20-year NY enforcement period begins from the original judgment date, not the domestication date. Don’t wait until your original state’s judgment is about to expire.
