How long does a Texas child support lien on a bank account last, and what property does it reach?
Plain-English summary
Representative Giovanni Capriglione, who chairs the House Committee on Delivery of Government Efficiency, asked the Attorney General a set of questions about what banks and other financial institutions have to do when they receive a child support lien or levy under Chapter 157 of the Texas Family Code. The questions came down to three things: how long a child support lien lasts, what property the lien reaches, and whether paying a levy makes the lien go away.
On duration, the AG read the statute literally. A child support lien "is effective until all current support and child support arrearages, including interest" and certain costs and fees "have been paid or the lien is otherwise released" (Tex. Fam. Code § 157.318(a)). So there is no calendar deadline. The lien sits on the account until the debt is satisfied or someone releases it under the procedures in subchapter G (for example, the claimant signs a release, or a court orders one because no arrearages exist).
On scope, the AG concluded the lien reaches after-acquired property, money the obligor deposits after the notice arrives. Subsection 157.317(a-1) attaches the lien to the obligor's property "from the date the lien notice is delivered," and the AG read "from the date" as describing an ongoing attachment rather than a one-time snapshot. The mandatory content of a lien notice confirms it: the notice itself states the lien covers "any property acquired after the date of filing or delivery of the notice" (id. § 157.313(a)(9)). The lone carve-out is for after-acquired motor vehicles, which require a separate notice (id. § 157.313(d)), and the AG treated that single exception as proof that everything else is swept in automatically.
On whether complying with a levy ends the lien, the answer was: it can, but it does not have to. Liens and levies are different tools with different duties. A levy directs the institution to pay over a set amount of the arrearages within 15 to 21 days (id. § 157.327(b)(2)). Paying it might satisfy the whole debt and lead to a release, but if the levied funds do not cover everything owed, the statute authorizes additional levies until the arrearages are fully paid (id. § 157.331), and the lien continues in the meantime.
What this means for you
If you work at a bank or credit union
Based on this opinion, a child support lien you receive does not expire on its own; it stays attached until the arrearages (plus interest, costs, and fees) are paid or you receive a release under subchapter G. The opinion reads the lien to reach funds the obligor deposits after you got the notice, not just the balance on the day it arrived. And paying one levy does not automatically clear the lien: the AG points out that a claimant can come back with further levies until the debt is satisfied. The opinion also notes institutions have ways to limit their exposure, including being joined as a respondent in a foreclosure action (Tex. Fam. Code § 157.323(b)) or using interpleader (Tex. R. Civ. P. 43).
If you are a family law attorney or a claimant collecting child support
The opinion confirms the lien has staying power: no fixed end date, and it follows after-acquired property at the institution from the date of delivery forward. It also confirms a single levy is not the end of the road. If one levy under-recovers, subsection 157.331 lets you levy again. Remember the release duties cut the other way too: once the debt and allowed fees are paid in full, a claimant must execute a release (id. § 157.322).
If you are an obligor who owes child support
The opinion describes how broadly the lien can reach. It attaches to property at the financial institution from the date the notice is delivered, including money you deposit later, and it stays in place until the arrearages are paid or released. The opinion notes you can contest a levy by filing suit (id. § 157.328(b)(2)), but it does not address any particular defense.
Common questions
Q: When does a Texas child support lien on a bank account expire?
A: It does not expire on a set date. Under Tex. Fam. Code § 157.318(a), the lien is effective until all current support and arrearages (including interest, costs, and fees) are paid or the lien is released under subchapter G of Chapter 157.
Q: Does the lien only cover money in the account when the notice arrives?
A: No. The AG concluded the lien attaches to the obligor's property at the financial institution "from the date the lien notice is delivered," which the opinion reads to include property acquired after delivery, such as later deposits.
Q: If the bank pays a levy, is the lien gone?
A: Not necessarily. The AG concluded that complying with a levy may lead to release of the lien but does not have to. If a single levy does not cover the full arrearages, the claimant can levy again, and the lien continues until the debt is satisfied or released.
Q: Is there any property the lien does not automatically catch?
A: The opinion identifies one exception in the statute: after-acquired motor vehicles, which require the claimant to file a separate notice for each vehicle before a previously perfected lien attaches (id. § 157.313(d)).
Q: Who enforces these liens in Texas?
A: The opinion notes the Office of the Attorney General is designated as the state's Title IV-D child support enforcement agency (id. §§ 101.033, 231.001) and runs an electronic data-match program with financial institutions to identify accounts of delinquent obligors (id. § 231.307(a); 1 Tex. Admin. Code § 55.553(a)).
Background and statutory framework
Chapter 157 of the Family Code provides liens and levies as mechanisms to enforce court-ordered child support. A child support lien "arises by operation of law against real and personal property of an obligor for all amounts of child support due and owing, including any accrued interest" (Tex. Fam. Code § 157.312(d)), and an account at a financial institution is property to which the lien may attach (id. § 157.317(a)(1)). The lien is perfected by delivering a child support lien notice to the institution, and delivery both attaches and perfects the lien (id. §§ 157.316, .317(a-1)).
Once perfected, a claimant may levy on the assets without bringing a foreclosure action (id. §§ 157.327–.331). A notice of levy directs the institution to pay the arrearages to the claimant 15 to 21 days after delivery (id. § 157.327(b)(2)), and an institution that surrenders the property is not liable to the obligor (id. § 157.329). Several provisions govern release: a claimant may release a lien at any time without liability (id. § 157.321(a)), and must execute a release once support, costs, and reasonable attorney's fees are paid in full (id. § 157.322).
The AG resolved the questions on the statute's plain text, citing the rule that when a statute's language is clear and unambiguous courts do not resort to rules of construction or extrinsic aids (City of Rockwall v. Hughes, 246 S.W.3d 621, 626 (Tex. 2008)). It read each provision in context, giving meaning to every word (Pub. Util. Comm'n of Tex. v. Luminant Energy Co., 691 S.W.3d 448, 460–61 (Tex. 2024)), and relied on the grammar of "from the date" to support continuing attachment (Tex. Health Presbyterian Hosp. of Denton v. D.A., 569 S.W.3d 126, 132 (Tex. 2018)). Federal authority confirmed that "each incident of unpaid child support results in a statutory judgment and lien when the payment was due" (Ramsey v. United States, No. A-15-CV-853-LY, 2017 WL 5478150, at *2 (W.D. Tex. Mar. 28, 2017)).
Citations and references
Statutes:
- Tex. Fam. Code ch. 157 — child support liens and levies
- Tex. Fam. Code § 157.318 — duration of a child support lien
- Tex. Fam. Code § 157.317 — property to which a lien attaches
- 1 Tex. Admin. Code § 55.553 — financial-institution data match
Key cases:
- City of Rockwall v. Hughes, 246 S.W.3d 621 (Tex. 2008) — plain-meaning rule for unambiguous statutes
- Pub. Util. Comm'n of Tex. v. Luminant Energy Co., 691 S.W.3d 448 (Tex. 2024) — read statutes in context, give meaning to every word
- Tex. Health Presbyterian Hosp. of Denton v. D.A., 569 S.W.3d 126 (Tex. 2018) — grammar canon in statutory construction
- Ramsey v. United States, 2017 WL 5478150 (W.D. Tex. 2017) — each unpaid child support installment creates a statutory judgment and lien
Source
- Landing page: https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/opinions/ken-paxton/kp-0494
- Original PDF: https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/files/opinion-files/opinion/2025/kp-04941.pdf
Original opinion text
KEN PAXTON
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS
June 25, 2025
The Honorable Giovanni Capriglione
Chair, House Committee on Delivery of Government Efficiency
Texas House of Representatives
Post Office Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78768-2910
Opinion No. KP-0494
Re: Scope of third-party obligations resulting from child support liens under Family Code chapter 157 (RQ-0567-KP)
Dear Representative Capriglione:
You ask a series of questions about third-party duties resulting from the enforcement of child support obligations under Chapter 157 of the Texas Family Code.1 TEX. FAM. CODE §§ 157.001–.551. In particular, your questions relate to the duration and scope of child support liens and levies—prompted by a focused concern about financial institutions' duties regarding current and future accounts. Request Letter at 1–2. We thus limit our opinion accordingly and begin with some background information to provide context for your questions.
Chapter 157 of the Family Code provides for child support liens and levies as mechanisms to enforce child support obligations.
Title 5 of the Family Code addresses the parent-child relationship and suits affecting that relationship, TEX. FAM. CODE §§ 101.001–267.002, providing for court-ordered child support payments,2 id. § 154.001, and detailing how a claimant3 can enforce those obligations through liens and levies on accounts maintained by a third-party financial institution, id. §§ 157.312, .327.
1 See Letter from Hon. Giovanni Capriglione, Chair, H. Comm. on Pensions, Invs., and Fin. Servs., to Hon. Ken Paxton, Tex. Att'y Gen. at 1–2 (Oct. 17, 2024), https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/files/request-files/request/2024/RQ0567KP.pdf ("Request Letter").
2 For purposes of Title 5 of the Family Code, a person who is "required to make payment under the terms of a support order for a child" is referred to as an "obligor" and the "person or entity entitled to receive payment of child support" is referred to as the "obligee." TEX. FAM. CODE §§ 101.001, .021–.022.
3 For purposes of subchapter G, Chapter 157 of the Family Code, a "claimant" refers to an obligee or their private attorney, "the Title IV-D agency providing child support services[,] [] a domestic relations office or local registry[,] or [] an attorney appointed as a friend of the court." Id. § 157.311(2).
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A child support lien works to secure the payment of any child support arrearages owed by an obligor pursuant to a child support order by giving the obligee or claimant a right to the obligor's property. Id. §§ 157.318(b), .326(b). A "lien arises by operation of law against real and personal property of an obligor for all amounts of child support due and owing, including any accrued interest, regardless of whether the amounts have been adjudicated or otherwise determined, subject to the requirements" to perfect the lien. Id. § 157.312(d); see also, e.g., Ramsey v. United States, No. A-15-CV-853-LY, 2017 WL 5478150, at *2 (W.D. Tex. Mar. 28, 2017) (explaining that, under both state and federal law, "each incident of unpaid child support results in a statutory judgment and lien when the payment was due" and citing Texas Family Code Section 157.261 and subsection 157.312(d) and Title 42 of the United States Code subsection 666(a)). An account maintained by a financial institution is property to which a child-support lien may attach. TEX. FAM. CODE § 157.317(a)(1); see also id. § 157.311(1) (defining "account"), (4) (defining "financial institution"). The lien may be perfected by delivering notice to a financial institution "believed to be in possession of . . . personal property of the obligor." Id. §§ 157.314(b)(3), .316(a) (providing a child support lien is perfected when a child support lien notice is delivered as provided by Section 157.314); see also id. § 157.3145(a) (addressing how to serve notice of the lien on a financial institution). Delivery of the notice both attaches and perfects the lien. Id. §§ 157.316, .317(a-1).
Once perfected, a claimant may then seek to levy on the assets and thereby cause the financial institution to pay over the funds to the claimant. Assuming child support arrearages have been judicially or administratively determined, a claimant may levy on assets owned by or owed to an obligor that are possessed or controlled by a financial institution without bringing a foreclosure action. Id. §§ 157.327–.331. To levy on an obligor's funds that are possessed or controlled by a financial institution, the claimant must deliver a notice of levy to the financial institution and the obligor.4 Id. §§ 157.327(a), .328(a). The notice to the financial institution must, among other things, direct the financial institution to pay the amount of arrearages to the claimant between fifteen and twenty-one days after the date the notice is delivered. Id. § 157.327(b)(2). The financial institution must, with certain exceptions, remit the monies to the claimant. Id. § 157.328(b)(2) (providing, for example, that the obligor may contest the levy by filing suit). If the financial institution surrenders the property, it is not liable to the obligor or other person for the property surrendered. Id. § 157.329.
A child support lien continues until all current child support and arrearages are paid or the lien is otherwise released.
Your first series of questions ask about the duration of a child support lien. See Request Letter at 1. Section 157.318 expressly provides that "[a] lien is effective until all current support and child support arrearages, including interest" and certain costs and fees "for which the obligor is responsible, have been paid or the lien is otherwise released as provided by" subchapter G. TEX. FAM. CODE § 157.318(a).
4 A levy on the financial institution of a deceased obligor is governed by a separate section of the Family Code. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 157.3271. Given the focus of your request, however, we do not address that topic. See Request Letter at 2.
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Several provisions of subchapter G address the release of a lien. For instance, a lien release may be signed by the claimant and delivered to the person in possession of the personal property, or ordered by a court when arrearages do not exist. Id. § 157.319(a). Subchapter G also provides that a "claimant may at any time release a lien on all or part of the property of the obligor or return seized property, without liability, if assurance of payment is considered adequate by the claimant or if the release or return will facilitate the collection of the arrearages."5 Id. § 157.321(a). Additionally, a claimant must execute a release of the child support lien when the amount of support that is due, along with any costs and reasonable attorney's fees, are paid in full.6 Id. § 157.322.
In sum, the Family Code makes clear that a child support lien on an account with a financial institution has no uniform ending date but instead continues until all current support and arrearages (including interest, costs, and fees) are paid or the lien is otherwise released pursuant to subchapter G. Id. § 157.318(a); see also, e.g., City of Rockwall v. Hughes, 246 S.W.3d 621, 626 (Tex. 2008) (explaining that when a statute's language is clear and unambiguous courts do not resort to rules of construction or extrinsic aids to construe the language).
A child support lien attaches to an obligor's property that is in the possession or control of a financial institution from the date the child support lien notice is delivered to the financial institution, including property acquired after deliver of the notice.
Your second series of questions relate to whether "a child support lien attach[es] to property that comes into the possession or control of a" financial institution after the delivery of the lien notice. Request Letter at 1. You suggest subsection 157.317(a-1) is ambiguous as to whether "the child support lien attaches to after-acquired property." Id. at 3–4. We disagree.
Courts "discern a statute's objectives from its plain text" which "must always be read 'in context—not isolation.'" Pub. Util. Comm'n of Tex. v. Luminant Energy Co., 691 S.W.3d 448, 460 (Tex. 2024) (citation omitted). A court "'give[s] meaning to every word in a statute, harmonizing each provision,' while 'consider[ing] the context and framework of the entire statute,' in order to 'meld its words into a cohesive reflection of legislative intent.'" Id. at 460–61 (second alteration in original) (citations omitted). When a statute is clear and unambiguous courts do not resort to rules of construction or extrinsic aids to construe the language. See, e.g., Hughes, 246 S.W.3d at 626.
Subsection 157.317(a-1) addresses the property to which a lien attaches. TEX. FAM. CODE § 157.317(a-1). Its plain text reveals a lien attaches to the obligor's "property owned or acquired" and "in the possession or control of a third party, from the date the lien notice is delivered." Id. The phrase "from the date" connotes a continuing obligation rather than a fixed duty, as would be communicated by "as of" or "on." See generally Tex. Health Presbyterian Hosp. of Denton v. D.A., 569 S.W.3d 126, 132 (Tex. 2018) (recognizing that "grammar rules can be crucial to proper construction"); ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 140 (2012) (discussing the "Grammar Canon," which counsels that "[w]ords are to be given the meaning that proper grammar and usage would assign to them"). The mandatory content of lien notices under state law confirms the same—explaining that "the lien attaches to all nonexempt real and personal property of the obligor . . . , including any property specifically identified in the notice and any property acquired after the date of filing or delivery of the notice." TEX. FAM. CODE § 157.313(a)(9) (emphasis added). Likewise, the lone exception for motor vehicles—requiring that a claimant "file a notice for each after-acquired motor vehicle" in order for a previously perfected lien to attach—further demonstrates that a lien attaches to property obtained after perfection unless otherwise provided. See id. § 157.313(d).
Taken together, the Family Code unambiguously provides that a lien attaches to all property of the obligor in the possession or control of a financial institution from the date the child support lien notice is delivered to the financial institution, which includes property acquired after delivery of the notice.7
Compliance with a child support levy may, but does not necessarily, lead to the release of a child support lien.
Your third series of questions concern whether "compliance with a levy dispose[s] of the child support lien notice as to a third-party recipient." Request Letter at 2. As previously stated, a child support lien continues until all current support and arrearages (including interest, costs, and fees) are paid or the lien is otherwise released pursuant to subchapter G. See discussion supra p. 3. Liens and levies carry different obligations and potential liabilities under the Family Code. An institution with actual notice of a lien cannot pay over, release, sell, transfer, encumber, or convey property to which that lien has attached. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 157.319(a)–(b) (discussing obligations and liability); see also id. § 157.3145 (discussing service on a financial institution). "A financial institution that receives notice of levy," on the other hand, is separately prohibited from closing an account in which an obligor has an ownership interest—among other things—and must provide notice to others with an ownership interest in those accounts. Id. § 157.327(c)–(d). These institutions are likewise directed to pay no more than the arrearages due "from the assets of . . . or from funds due to the obligor that are held or controlled by the institution" within fifteen to twenty-one days. Id. § 157.327(b)(2).
5 Section 157.321 further advises that "[t]he release or return may not operate to prevent future action to collect from the same or other property owned by the obligor." TEX. FAM. CODE § 157.321(a).
6 Relevant here, the release "is effective when[] . . . delivered to any other individual or organization that may have been served with a lien notice" under subchapter G. Id. § 157.322(b)(2).
7 You raise concerns about a financial institution receiving a "lien notice for an obligor who is not an account holder at the time" the lien notice is served. Request Letter at 2. The Office of the Attorney General ("OAG") is designated as the Title IV-D child support enforcement agency for the State of Texas. TEX. FAM. CODE §§ 101.033, 231.001. As such, the OAG is required to develop an electronic data match exchange program to identify accounts of a child support obligor "owing past-due child support and to enforce support obligations against the obligor, including the imposition of a lien and a levy . . . on an obligor's assets held in financial institutions as required by federal law." Id. § 231.307(a) (referencing 42 U.S.C. § 666). The electronic data match exchange program regulations require financial institutions doing business in Texas to participate in the program by "matching the names of delinquent child support obligors with the names of account holders and providing information from matched account owner records on all accounts owned by the delinquent child support obligor" every three months. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 55.553(a). This program may minimize the possibility of a financial institution receiving a lien notice for a non-account holder.
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Ultimately, the fact that compliance with a levy may lead to the release of a lien does not mean that it must.8 See, e.g., id. §§ 157.322 (requiring a claimant to execute a release of the child support lien when the amount of support that is due, along with any costs and reasonable attorney's fees, are paid in full), .331 (recognizing that an individual levy may not produce sufficient assets and authorizing subsequent levies, which compel separate obligations and liabilities from those prior, until arrearages are fully satisfied).
8 Though you also raise several practical concerns about a financial institution's ability to discharge liability under a perfected lien, Request Letter at 3–6, none justifies a departure from the Family Code's plain text. We note, however, that financial institutions possess several means of discharging liability. See, e.g., TEX. FAM. CODE § 157.323(b) (providing that a financial institution may be joined as a respondent in an action to foreclose a child support lien); Tex. R. Civ. P. 43 ("Interpleader").
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SUMMARY
Based on the plain text of Family Code subsection 157.318(a), child support liens on accounts with financial institutions have no uniform ending date but continue until all current support and arrearages (including interests, costs, and fees) are paid or the lien is otherwise released pursuant to Chapter 157 of the Family Code.
Family Code subsection 157.317(a-1) addresses property to which a child support lien attaches. The plain text of that subsection reveals that a lien attaches to all property of the obligor in the possession or control of a financial institution from the date the child support lien notice is delivered to the financial institution, which includes property acquired after deliver of the notice.
Compliance with a child support levy may, but does not necessarily, lead to the release of a lien.
Very truly yours,
KEN PAXTON
Attorney General of Texas
BRENT WEBSTER
First Assistant Attorney General
LESLEY FRENCH
Chief of Staff
D. FORREST BRUMBAUGH
Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
JOSHUA C. FIVESON
Chair, Opinion Committee
CHRISTY DRAKE-ADAMS
Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee