JC
JudgmentCollection.org
Judgment buyers · enforcement · asset investigations

 

Judgment enforcement · state & nationwide

We enforce judgments with precision — garnishments, levies, liens, and asset targeting.

If you don’t want to sell your judgment and prefer to maximize recovery,
we handle the procedures, filings, and asset targeting needed to force payment,
freeze accounts, or seize property.

Bank garnishments
Wage garnishments
Levies & seizures
Skip tracing & assets

Why enforcement

Maximize recovery by targeting the debtor’s money, income, and property

If the debtor has a job, a business, vehicles, real estate, or uses a bank,
we can typically force compliance with post-judgment tools.

Bank account garnishments
Freeze their funds before they move them. This is often the fastest path
to collection when accounts are active.
Wage garnishments
When legal in the debtor’s state, wages can be garnished until the judgment is paid.
Property levies & seizures
Vehicles, equipment, business assets, and sometimes real estate can be seized
depending on the state rules and equity.

Straightforward path

How enforcement works with our team

We use post-judgment discovery, subpoenas, garnishments, liens, and levies
to force payment through legally allowed pressure points.

1. We analyze the debtor’s financial footprint
Banking, employment, businesses, vehicles, properties, filings, and public records.
2. We select the enforcement strategy
Garnish wages, freeze accounts, lien properties, levy assets, or use all tools together.
3. We file and execute actions quickly
Our objective is pressure. Court orders, sheriff levies, subpoenas,
liens — whatever applies legally in your jurisdiction.
What determines enforcement success?
Core indicators we examine:
  • Active bank accounts or payroll
  • Vehicles, equipment, or business assets
  • Employment or recurring income
  • Real estate ownership or rentals
  • Debtor’s state of residence

Quick answers

Is enforcement better than selling?

It depends on your timeline, risk tolerance, and the debtor’s profile.
Enforcement may yield more money, but it requires time and patience.

Do you charge upfront fees?
No. Enforcement is contingency-based or hybrid depending on the state and case complexity.
How long does enforcement take?
First actions typically begin within 7–21 days. Full recovery depends on assets found and legal timelines.
What if you find no assets?
We tell you plainly. Some debtors cannot be collected against — in which case we recommend alternate paths or monitoring.

Start here

Request an enforcement review

Use the secure form to submit your judgment and debtor details. We’ll review
the case and outline the enforcement strategy most likely to succeed.

Contact us to schedule a free consultation

Are you sure you want to throw this money away?