Disability Income and Debt in Washington
Federal SSDI and SSI benefits are fully exempt from creditors in Washington under 42 U.S.C. Section 407 -- the same protection as in every other state. This cannot be taken away by state law or a creditor judgment. Washington runs a state disability insurance program in addition to federal SSDI, and benefits from that program are also typically exempt from garnishment.
Understanding which of your income streams are exempt, which state-specific protections apply, and when bankruptcy adds value is the core of debt management for Washington residents on disability.
Washington Disability and Debt Rules
| Protection | Washington Rule |
|---|---|
| SSDI/SSI Benefits | Fully exempt (42 U.S.C. 407) |
| Wage Garnishment Cap | Follows federal CCPA; 35x state minimum wage protected. |
| State Disability Program | Paid Family and Medical Leave program. |
| Other Disability Protection | Disability benefits exempt under RCW 6.15.020. |
When Are You Judgment Proof in Washington?
"Judgment proof" means a creditor who sues and wins a judgment has no practical way to collect. In Washington, you may be functionally judgment proof if:
- All your income is SSDI/SSI/VA - these federal benefits cannot be garnished by ordinary creditors.
- Your bank account is exempt - Washington and federal law protect a specified dollar amount in bank accounts from levy, especially if the source is government benefits.
- Your assets are within Washington exemptions - homestead, vehicle, household goods, and retirement accounts are typically protected.
See our full judgment-proof analysis. Being judgment proof does not erase the debt -- it only prevents forced collection. Bankruptcy erases the debt entirely.
Commingling Problem: Protect Your Benefits
Federal benefits are exempt from garnishment, but once they are deposited and mixed with other funds, a bank may freeze the account when a levy lands. The Treasury's 2011 rule protects the last two months of direct-deposited federal benefits automatically, but anything older or commingled with other income can be frozen pending a court hearing.
Best practices in Washington:
- Keep SSDI/SSI/VA in a separate, dedicated account.
- Set up direct deposit so the "federal benefit" coding is clear on bank records.
- Do not deposit wages or other non-exempt income into the same account.
- If a levy hits, act immediately -- claim the federal benefit exemption.
Detailed playbook: SSDI and garnishment guide.
When Bankruptcy Still Helps in Washington
Even if your income is fully exempt, bankruptcy can still add value:
- Stops collection lawsuits and calls. The automatic stay freezes all collection activity.
- Eliminates debt entirely -- judgment-proof status only defers; bankruptcy discharge ends the obligation.
- Clears the credit report faster -- discharged debts are reported as such.
- Protects future recoveries -- if your health improves or you receive a back-award, pre-petition creditors cannot come after you post-discharge.
Student Loan Discharge for Washington Disabled Filers
Federal student loans can be discharged in two ways for disabled borrowers:
- Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) discharge - an administrative process through the Department of Education, no bankruptcy required.
- Bankruptcy 523(a)(8) adversary - using the post-2022 DOJ Attestation Form guidance, which made student loan discharge much more accessible.
See student loan discharge guide for the full process in Washington.