Bank Garnishment
Writ of garnishment served on a financial institution under Chapter 77, F.S. Captures non-exempt funds in the account on the date of service. Notice and exemption procedures apply. Read more →
Each tool addresses a specific asset class. Selection depends on what assets exist and which exemptions apply.
Writ of garnishment served on a financial institution under Chapter 77, F.S. Captures non-exempt funds in the account on the date of service. Notice and exemption procedures apply. Read more →
Continuing writ of garnishment against an employer for non-exempt wages. §222.11, F.S. protects head-of-family earnings ≤$750/week. Read more →
Personal property lien under §55.202 (Department of State filing). Real property lien under §55.10 (county recording). 10-year initial life with renewal available. Read more →
Sheriff levy on non-exempt personal or real property. Coordinated with county sheriff civil process division. Public sale of seized property. Read more →
Authorized under §56.29, F.S. Reaches fraudulently transferred assets and third-party recipients. Used when the debtor has moved assets to family, businesses, or successor entities. Read more →
Compelled testimony under oath about assets, income, and transfers. Can be combined with document subpoenas. Failure to appear is contempt. Read more →
Florida judgment recovery is the legal process of enforcing a money judgment to recover the amount owed. It includes asset location, lien recording, garnishment, writs of execution, and proceedings supplementary — all governed by Florida Statutes Chapters 55, 56, 77, and 222.
Bank garnishment can produce funds within 30-60 days of service if the account holds non-exempt funds. Wage garnishment is ongoing while employed. Real property recovery via judgment lien typically takes 6-18 months. Each case timeline depends on debtor cooperation and asset profile.
Some Florida creditors enforce simple cases pro se, but most recovery work involves court filings, formal notice procedures, and exemption hearings. Belua Capital is led by a licensed Florida private investigator and works with retained counsel on filings that require attorney signature.
Industry estimates vary widely — uncollected judgments are common because most creditors stop after entry. With professional enforcement, collectability depends on debtor asset profile, age of judgment, and exemption claims. Cases with viable enforcement paths are accepted; cases without are declined at intake.
We review the judgment, debtor, and asset indicators. Free, written, no obligation.
Get Free AssessmentLast reviewed: April 2026