Debt Collection Laws in Virginia
If you're dealing with debt collection in Virginia, here's what actually protects you: a cap on how much of your paycheck can be garnished, a base amount of home equity and bank funds creditors can't touch, and a deadline after which a debt lawsuit generally can't succeed. Current as ofJuly 2026 — sourcing for each section is linked below.
How much of my paycheck can be garnished in Virginia?
Virginia caps most wage garnishment at the lesser of 25% of your weekly disposable earnings, or the amount by which those earnings exceed 40 times the minimum hourly wage — under Va. Code § 34-29. That 40x multiplier is more generous to debtors than the federal formula's 30x, so Virginia is somewhat more protective than the plain federal rule.
At Virginia's current minimum wage, that works out to a little over $500 a week fully shielded before any garnishment can apply. Support obligations (child or spousal support) are a different matter entirely and can allow garnishment up to 60-65% of disposable earnings, especially on older arrearages.
Tier: Meaningfully stricter than the federal formula — see the full 20-state ranking.
Can a creditor take money from my bank account in Virginia?
Virginia's general householder's exemption protects $5,000 of personal property or money from creditors — $10,000 if you're 65 or older — plus $500 per dependent, under Va. Code §§ 34-4 and 34-13.
On top of that general exemption, a 2020 law amendment added a separate $25,000 exemption specifically for equity in your principal residence, which stacks with the general householder's exemption rather than replacing it. The same 2020 change also made it easier to claim: you can now list the exemption directly on bankruptcy schedules instead of filing a separate homestead deed beforehand.
Is my home protected from creditors in Virginia?
Virginia's homestead exemption for a principal residence is $25,000 in equity, on top of (not instead of) the general $5,000-$10,000 householder's exemption described above — a structure that trips people up if they assume it's a single number.
A homeowner 65 or older with a dependent could potentially combine the age-based $10,000 general exemption, the $25,000 residence exemption, and $500 per dependent for a meaningfully larger total than the base figures suggest.
How long can a debt collector sue me in Virginia?
In Virginia, a creditor has 5 years to sue you over a written contract that you personally signed — like most credit card and loan agreements — under Va. Code § 8.01-246. Oral agreements, implied contracts, and unsigned written contracts get a shorter 3-year window.
| Debt type | Statute of limitations |
|---|---|
| Signed written contract | 5 years |
| Oral or unsigned contract | 3 years |
| Medical debt (written contract) | 3 years |
Medical debt gets a specific carve-out: even though it's usually a written contract, Virginia shortens the clock to 3 years from the date of the final invoice, unless you agreed to a longer payment plan.
See how Virginia's 5 years deadline compares to all 20 states.
Does Virginia have its own debt collection law beyond the federal FDCPA?
Virginia doesn't have a single dedicated mini-FDCPA. Instead, deceptive collection practices are generally addressed through the general Virginia Consumer Protection Act (Va. Code § 59.1-196 et seq.), while separate licensing chapters cover debt-management and debt-settlement companies specifically.
That's a meaningfully different structure than states with a true standalone debt-collection statute — Virginia leans more heavily on the federal FDCPA for third-party collector conduct, layered with state licensing rules for debt-management and debt-settlement providers rather than a comprehensive collector-conduct law of its own.
Where can I find free or low-cost legal help in Virginia?
If you're dealing with a debt lawsuit, garnishment, or collector dispute in Virginia, a good starting point is the state bar's lawyer referral service or one of the legal aid organizations below — both can point you to self-help court resources even if you don't qualify for free representation.