A creditor may seek enforcement of a debt owed by a debtor through execution, attachment, or garnishment of the debtor's property.
Execution is the legal process for enforcing a court judgment for the payment of money or property by levying on the judgment debtor's property.
Attachment is a legal process that allows a plaintiff in a court action to ask the court to attach the defendant's property during the pendency of the action as security for satisfaction of a judgment that may be rendered in favor of the plaintiff.
Garnishment is a legal process by which a judgment creditor may recover funds owed by a judgment debtor by compelling third parties to divert to the creditor certain funds owned by or owed to the debtor, such as funds held in the debtor's bank accounts or the debtor's wages held by an employer.
Washington law entitles individual debtors or households to claim certain property as exempt from execution, attachment, and garnishment:
No money paid or payable under worker's compensation shall, before the issuance and delivery of the payment, be assigned, charged, or taken in execution, attached, or garnished, or pass or be paid to any other person.
An individual may claim the following property as exempt from execution, attachment, and garnishment:
In the case of married persons, each spouse is entitled to the exemptions of personal property, which may be combined with the other spouse's exemption in the same property or taken in different exempt property.
Every three years, beginning on April 1, 2026, each dollar amount shall be adjusted by the Department of Revenue to reflect the change in the consumer price index for all urban consumers, rounded to the nearest $25.
No money paid or payable under worker's compensation shall be assigned, charged, or taken in execution, attached, or garnished, or pass or be paid to any other person. Worker's compensation payments will retain their exempt status even after issuance.