Kansas Debt Collection Laws: SOL, Garnishment, and Exemptions

Statute of limitations, wage garnishment rules, homestead and vehicle exemptions, and consumer protection statutes that apply to Kansas debtors.

Kansas Debt Law Quick Reference

Key Kansas consumer debt rules
RuleKansas
Statute of limitations: credit card debt3 years
Statute of limitations: written contract5 years
Statute of limitations: oral contract3 years
Judgment renewal / life5 years
Wage garnishment cap (consumer debt)Up to 25 percent of disposable earnings
Homestead exemptionUnlimited (1 acre urban; 160 acres rural)
Motor vehicle exemption$20,000
Wildcard exemptionNone
Bankruptcy exemption choiceFederal or state exemptions

Statute of Limitations in Kansas

The statute of limitations sets the deadline within which a creditor or debt buyer can sue you for an unpaid debt. In Kansas, the standard limits are 3 years for credit card debt, 5 years for written contracts, and 3 years for oral contracts. The clock generally starts on the date of last activity on the account, which for most credit accounts is the date of last payment.

If a collector sues after the statute has expired, you can plead the SOL as an affirmative defense in your answer and the case will typically be dismissed. The catch is that several actions can restart or extend the clock: making any payment (no matter how small), signing a payment agreement, sending written acknowledgment of the debt, and in some states, making a verbal admission. The cleanest way to handle a time-barred debt is to do nothing that could be construed as reviving it.

Judgments in Kansas are enforceable for 5 years and are typically renewable, which means a judgment can become a long-running source of collection pressure if not addressed.

Wage Garnishment in Kansas

Up to 25 percent of disposable earnings. In Kansas, a creditor generally cannot garnish your wages without first obtaining a court judgment. The federal Consumer Credit Protection Act caps garnishment for consumer debt at 25 percent of disposable earnings (15 U.S.C. § 1673), and Kansas's rule applies the lower of the federal cap and the state limit.

Three categories of debt have different garnishment rules nationwide and override most state limits: child support and alimony (up to 50 to 60 percent of disposable earnings), federal income tax (IRS continuous wage levy with an exempt amount based on Publication 1494), and federal student loans (administrative wage garnishment up to 15 percent without a court order under 20 U.S.C. § 1095a).

If your wages are being garnished, filing bankruptcy stops most private-creditor garnishments immediately through the automatic stay (11 U.S.C. § 362). See our collection defense guide and bankruptcy overview for the broader playbook.

Bankruptcy Exemptions in Kansas

Kansas allows debtors to choose between federal and state bankruptcy exemptions. The Kansas-specific exemptions for consumer bankruptcy filers:

  • Homestead: Unlimited (1 acre urban; 160 acres rural) of equity in a primary residence.
  • Motor vehicle: $20,000 of equity in a vehicle.
  • Wildcard: None.

Retirement accounts receive separate, very strong protection in Kansas. ERISA-qualified plans (401(k), 403(b), most pensions) are fully exempt without dollar limit in every state under federal law. Traditional and Roth IRAs are protected up to $1,512,350 per person under 11 U.S.C. § 522(n). Social Security benefits are fully exempt under 42 U.S.C. § 407.

Kansas has an unlimited homestead with acreage caps and a generous motor vehicle exemption.

Kansas Debt Collection Statute

Kansas Consumer Protection Act applies to some collection conduct. The federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 1692 to 1692p) applies in every state and sets the floor for consumer debt collection protection. Kansas's rules either extend those protections to additional entities (like original creditors) or provide additional remedies.

Common protections under both federal and state debt collection law: collectors cannot call before 8 AM or after 9 PM in your time zone; cannot use abusive, deceptive, or unfair practices; cannot threaten actions they have no legal right to take; cannot discuss the debt with third parties (other than for limited location purposes); must verify a disputed debt within 30 days of a written request; and must comply with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Regulation F (effective 2021) on call frequency and electronic communications.

When Bankruptcy Makes Sense for Kansas Debtors

For most Kansas consumer debtors with $20,000+ of unsecured debt and below-median income, Chapter 7 bankruptcy is the fastest and cheapest path to resolving the debt. Total cost is typically $1,500 to $2,800, the case lasts 3 to 6 months, and qualifying unsecured debt is discharged entirely. The means test compares your household income to Kansas's state median for your household size (published by the U.S. Trustee Program and updated twice a year).

Chapter 13 is the right tool when you need to catch up on a mortgage to keep your house, protect nonexempt assets above the homestead or other exemption amounts, or address priority debt (recent taxes, child support arrears) that Chapter 7 cannot discharge.

For a deeper comparison of bankruptcy versus debt settlement and debt management plans, see our bankruptcy vs settlement and bankruptcy vs DMP guides.

Kansas Debt Collection FAQ

How long can a creditor sue me for a credit card debt in Kansas?

The statute of limitations on credit card debt in Kansas is 3 years from the date of last activity on the account (usually the date of last payment). If a debt collector files suit after that window, you can plead the statute of limitations as a defense and the case will typically be dismissed. Be careful not to restart the clock by making a partial payment or written acknowledgment of the debt.

Can a creditor garnish my wages in Kansas?

Up to 25 percent of disposable earnings. Kansas follows the same federal Bankruptcy Code definition of disposable earnings, which is gross pay minus mandatory deductions. Domestic support obligations, federal taxes, and federal student loans have separate rules and can exceed the general consumer-debt cap.

What is the Kansas homestead exemption?

The Kansas homestead exemption protects Unlimited (1 acre urban; 160 acres rural) of equity in a primary residence from creditors and bankruptcy trustees. Equity below this amount is generally untouchable; equity above it may be subject to forced sale in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy unless protected by a Chapter 13 plan that pays creditors the equivalent of the nonexempt amount.

Does Kansas have its own debt collection statute?

Kansas Consumer Protection Act applies to some collection conduct. State statutes that extend protections beyond the federal FDCPA often cover original creditors as well as third-party collectors, and may provide stronger remedies for violations.

Can I file bankruptcy and keep my home in Kansas?

Usually yes if your equity is within the homestead exemption (Unlimited (1 acre urban; 160 acres rural)) and you stay current on the mortgage. If you have substantial equity above the exemption, Chapter 13 is generally the right tool to keep the home while paying creditors the equivalent of the nonexempt amount through the plan.

Sources

Dollar amounts and exemption rules are May 2026 figures. Kansas statutes adjust periodically. Verify against current state code before relying on these figures in litigation.