How Bankruptcy Can Help With Foreclosure Back
To List
by Attorney Stephen R. Elias
Avoid or delay foreclosure
of your home by seeking bankruptcy protection.
If you are facing foreclosure and cannot work
out a deal or other alternative with the lender, bankruptcy may
help.
If you get behind on your mortgage payments,
a lender may take steps to foreclose—that is, enforce the
terms of the loan by selling the house at a public auction and
taking payment of your loan out of the auction.
This won’t happen overnight. The foreclosure
process typically starts after you fall behind on your payments
for at least two months, and often three or four. That gives you
time to try some alternate measures, such as loan forbearance,
a short sale, or a deed in lieu of foreclosure.
But if you've already tried and failed with these
measures, now is a good time to consider bankruptcy as a possibility
for avoiding or stalling foreclosure. Here are some ways that
filing for bankruptcy can help you.
The Automatic Stay: Delaying Foreclosure
When you file either a Chapter 13 or Chapter
7 bankruptcy, the court automatically issues an order (called
the Order for Relief) that includes a wonderful thing known as
the “automatic stay.” The automatic stay directs your
creditors to cease their collection activities immediately, no
excuses. If your home is scheduled for a foreclosure sale, the
sale will be legally postponed while the bankruptcy is pending—typically
for three to four months. However, there are two exceptions to
this general rule:
Motion to lift the stay. If
the lender obtains the bankruptcy court’s permission to
proceed with the sale (by filing a “motion to lift the stay”),
you may not get the full three to four months. But even then,
the bankruptcy will typically postpone the sale by at least two
months, or even more if the lender is slow in pursuing the motion
to lift the automatic stay.
Foreclosure notice already filed.
Unfortunately, bankruptcy’s automatic stay won’t stop
the clock on the advance notice that most states require before
a foreclosure sale can be held (or a motion to lift the stay can
be filed). For example, before selling a home in California ,
a lender has to give the owner at least three months’ notice.
If you receive a three-month notice of default, and then file
for bankruptcy after two months have passed, the three-month period
would elapse after you’d been in bankruptcy for only one
month. At that time the lender could file a motion to lift the
stay and ask the court for permission to schedule the foreclosure
sale.
How Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Can Help
Many people will do whatever
they can to stay in their home for the indefinite future. If that
describes you, and you’re behind on your mortgage payments
with no feasible way to get current, the only way to keep your
home is to file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
How Chapter 13 works.
Chapter 13 bankruptcy lets you pay off the “arrearage”
(late, unpaid payments) over the length of a repayment plan you
propose—five years in some cases. But you’ll need
enough income to at least meet your current mortgage payment at
the same time you’re paying off the arrearage. Assuming
you make all the required payments up to the end of the repayment
plan, you’ll avoid foreclosure and keep your home.
2nd and 3rd mortgage
payments. Chapter 13 may also help you eliminate the
payments on your second or third mortgage. That’s because,
if your first mortgage is secured by the entire value of your
home (which is possible if the home has dropped in value), you
may no longer have any equity with which to secure the later mortgages.
That allows the Chapter 13 court to “strip off” the
second and third mortgages and recategorize them as unsecured
debt —which, under Chapter 13, takes last priority
and often does not have to be paid back at all.
Canceling debt.
Chapter 7 bankruptcy will also cancel all the debt that is secured
by your home, including the mortgage, as well as any second mortgages
and home equity loans.
Canceling tax liability
for certain property loans. Thanks to a new law, you
no longer face tax liability for losses your mortgage or home-improvement
lender incurs as a result of your default, whether you file for
bankruptcy or not. This new law applies to the 2007 tax year and
the following two years.
However, the new tax law doesn’t
shield you from tax liability for losses the lender incurs after
the foreclosure sale if:
- the loan is not a mortgage or was not used
for home improvements (such as a home equity loan used to
pay for a car or vacation), or
- the mortgage or home equity loan is secured
by property other than your principal residence (for example,
a vacation home or rental property).
This is where Chapter 7 bankruptcy
helps. It will exempt you from tax liability on losses the lender
incurs if you default on these other loans.
Chapter 7 Cannot Cancel the Foreclosure
With all this debt being cancelled, you may be
wondering why the foreclosure on your home won’t be cancelled
too. The trouble is, when you bought your home you probably signed
two documents (at least)—a promissory note to repay the
mortgage loan, and a security agreement that could be recorded
as a lien to enforce performance on the promissory note.
Chapter 7 bankruptcy gets rid of your personal
liability under the promissory note, but it doesn’t remove
the lien. That’s the way Chapter 7 works. It gets rid of
debt but not liens—you’ll still probably have to give
up the house under the lien since that’s what provided collateral
for the loan.
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy May Not Be Right For You
Not everyone can or should use Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Here’s why:
You could lose property you want to keep.
Chapter 7 might cause you to lose property you don’t want
to give up. As an example, if your wedding ring is particularly
valuable, it may exceed the dollar amount of jewelry you’re
allowed to keep in a bankruptcy (under something called the "jewelry
exemption"). In that case, the bankruptcy trustee could order
you to turn the ring over to be sold for the benefit of your creditors.
You may not be eligible. Even
if Chapter 7 bankruptcy would work for you, you may not be eligible.
Under the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection
Act of 2005, you are not eligible if your average gross income
for the six-month period preceding the bankruptcy filing exceeds
the state median income for the same size household. Nor are you
eligible if your current income provides enough excess over your
living expenses to fund a reasonable Chapter 13 repayment plan.
Bankruptcy’s Effect on Your Credit Score
Both bankruptcy and foreclosure will damage your
credit score. However, sometimes bankruptcy is the preferable
option when trying to rebuild credit. Here’s why:
A foreclosure will damage your credit score for
many years, will not get rid of your other debt, and is particularly
harmful if you are house shopping.
In contrast, discharging your debts in bankruptcy
will harm your credit score, but can help you rebuild your score
quicker than after a foreclosure. This is because bankruptcy will
leave you solvent and debt-free—and therefore able to start
rebuilding good credit sooner.
Keep in mind that the current mortgage meltdown
and credit crunch (which are prevalent at the time this article
is being written) may change the way bankruptcy and foreclosure
affect credit ratings.
If All Else Fails: Relief From Debt and Tax
Liability
If you’re certain you won’t be able
to propose a Chapter 13 repayment plan that a bankruptcy judge
will approve, and Chapter 7 will provide only a temporary delay
from the foreclosure sale, then what’s the point of either?
If you have to lose your home—a bitter
result to be sure, but sometimes unavoidable—you can at
least view bankruptcy as the best way to get out from under your
mortgage debt and tax liability. Bankruptcy also offers a way
to save some money, which will help you find new shelter and weather
the psychological and economic shocks that lie ahead.
To learn more about Chapter 13 bankruptcy and
how it can help you avoid foreclosure, get
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Repay Your Debts, by Robin Leonard
and Stephen Elias (Nolo). For information on Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
including forms and instructions for filing yourself, get
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen R. Elias,
Albin Renauer, and Robin Leonard (Nolo).
If you're having trouble making your mortgage payments or already
in jeopardy of foreclosure, see
Nolo's Bankruptcy and Foreclosure Blog or the bestselling
Foreclosure Survival Guide, now available online
at
no charge. Both are written by practicing attorney Stephen
R. Elias, president of the National Bankruptcy Law Project.
The New Bankruptcy Law: Changes to Chapter 7
and 13 Back To List
Chapter 7 bankruptcy
may be harder to file under the new law.
The latest changes to bankruptcy law may be making
it harder for some people to file bankruptcy. And a few filers
with higher incomes are no longer allowed to use Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
but will instead have to repay at least some of their debt under
Chapter 13. All debtors now have to get credit counseling before
they can file a bankruptcy case -- and additional counseling on
budgeting and debt management before their debts can be wiped
out. And, because the law imposes new requirements on lawyers,
it is sometimes tougher to find an attorney to represent you in
a bankruptcy case.
Here are some of the most important changes.
Restricted Eligibility for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
Under the old rules, most filers could choose
the type of bankruptcy that seemed best for them -- and most chose
Chapter 7 bankruptcy (liquidation) over Chapter 13 bankruptcy
(repayment). The new law prohibits some filers with higher incomes
from using Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
How High is Your Income?
Under the new rules, the first step in figuring
out whether you can file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy is to measure
your "current monthly income" against the median income for a
household of your size in your state. If your income is less than
or equal to the median, you can file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
If it is more than the median, however, you must pass "the means
test" -- another requirement of the new law -- in order to file
for Chapter 7.
The Means Test
The purpose of the means test is to figure out
whether you have enough disposable income, after subtracting certain
allowed expenses and required debt payments, to make payments
on a Chapter 13 plan. To find out whether you pass the means test,
you subtract certain allowed expenses and debt payments from your
current monthly income. If the income that's left over after these
calculations is below a certain amount, you can file for Chapter
7.
If you're looking for an easy way to determine
your eligibility under the means test, use our online
means test calculator, created by the author of Nolo's book
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, Albin Renauer,
J.D. Once you enter your zip code, the calculator uses the applicable
income and expense standards for your state, county, and region
to determine your eligibility.
Counseling Requirements
Before you can file for bankruptcy under either
Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, you must complete credit counseling with
an agency approved by the United States Trustee's office. (To
find an approved agency in your area, go to the Trustee's website,
www.usdoj.gov/ust, and click "Credit Counseling and Debtor Education".)
The purpose of this counseling is to give you an idea of whether
you really need to file for bankruptcy or whether an informal
repayment plan would get you back on your economic feet.
Counseling is required even if it's obvious that
a repayment plan isn't feasible or you are facing debts that you
find unfair and don't want to pay. You are required only to participate,
not to go along with any repayment plan the agency proposes. However,
if the agency does come up with a repayment plan, you will have
to submit it to the court, along with a certificate showing that
you completed the counseling, before you can file for bankruptcy.
Toward the end of your bankruptcy case, you'll
have to attend another counseling session, this time to learn
personal financial management. Only after you submit proof to
the court that you fulfilled this requirement can you get a bankruptcy
discharge wiping out your debts. (The website above also lists
approved debt counselors.)
Lawyers May Be Harder to Find -- and More Expensive
As you can see, the new law adds some complicated requirements
to the field of bankruptcy. This makes it more expensive -- and
time-consuming -- for lawyers to represent clients in bankruptcy
cases, which means attorney fees have gone up.
The new law also imposes some additional requirements on lawyers,
chief among them that the lawyer must personally vouch for the
accuracy of all of the information their clients provide them.
This means attorneys have to spend more time on bankruptcy cases,
and charge their clients accordingly. This combination of new
requirements have driven some bankruptcy lawyers out of the field
altogether.
Some Chapter 13 Filers Will Have to Live on Less
Under the old rules, people who filed under Chapter 13 had to
devote all of their disposable income -- what they had left after
paying their actual living expenses -- to their repayment plan.
The new law added a wrinkle to this equation: Although Chapter
13 filers still have to hand over all of their disposable income,
they have to calculate their disposable income using allowed
expense amounts dictated by the IRS -- not their actual expenses
-- if their income is higher than the median in their state. And
these allowed expense amounts must be subtracted not from the
filer's actual earnings each month, but from the filer's average
income during the six months before filing.
Other Changes
There are other changes that can affect bankruptcy filers negatively,
including how property is valued (at replacement cost instead
of auction value) -- this means more debtors are at risk of having
their property taken and sold by the trustee -- and how long a
filer must live in a state to use that state's exemption laws
(this can make a big difference in the amount of property a bankruptcy
filer gets to hold on to). These changes and others are explained
in
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?, by Attorney
Stephen Elias (Nolo).
Also, you might find author Stephen Elias's podcast helpful:
What Are the Rules Under the New Bankruptcy Law?
Chapter 7 and Chapter
13 bankruptcy basics.
Bankruptcy is a federal court process designed
to help consumers and businesses eliminate their debts or repay
them under the protection of the bankruptcy court. Bankruptcies
can generally be described as "liquidations" or "reorganizations."
Chapter 7 bankruptcy is the liquidation variety:
If you own property that isn't exempt under your state's laws,
it may be taken and sold ("liquidated") to pay back some of your
debt. Chapter 13 bankruptcy is the most common type of "reorganization"
bankruptcy for consumers: You get to keep all of your property,
but you must make monthly payments over three to five years to
repay all or some of your debt.
Both kinds of bankruptcy have numerous rules
-- and exceptions to those rules -- about what kinds of debts
are covered, who can file, and what property you can and cannot
keep.
Chapter 7 bankruptcy can be filed by individuals
(called a "consumer" Chapter 7 bankruptcy) or businesses (called
a "business" Chapter 7 bankruptcy). A Chapter 7 bankruptcy typically
lasts three to six months.
Property liquidation. In Chapter
7 bankruptcy, some of your property may be sold to pay down your
debt. In return, most or all of your unsecured debts (that is,
debts for which collateral has not been pledged) will be erased.
You get to keep any property that is classified as exempt under
the state or federal laws available to you (such as your clothes,
car, and household furnishings). Many debtors who file for Chapter
7 bankruptcy are pleased to learn that all of their property is
exempt.
Secured debt. If you owe money
on a secured debt (for example, a car loan for which the car is
pledged as a guarantee of payment), you have a choice of allowing
the creditor to repossess the property; continuing your payments
on the property under the contract (if the lender agrees); or
paying the creditor a lump sum amount equal to the current replacement
value of the property. Some types of secured debts can be eliminated
in Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Eligibility for Chapter 7. Not everyone can
file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. For example, if your disposable
income is sufficient to fund a Chapter 13 repayment plan -- after
subtracting certain allowed expenses and monthly payments for
certain debts -- you won't be allowed to use Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
For more on this and other requirements, see
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy -- Who Can File?
Bankruptcy doesn't work on some kinds of debts.
Though bankruptcy can eliminate many kinds of debts, such as credit
card debt, medical bills, and unsecured loans, there are many
types of debts, including child support and spousal support obligations
and most tax debts, that cannot be wiped out in bankruptcy. For
more information, see
What Bankruptcy Can and Cannot Do.
For more information on Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
see
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, by attorney Stephen
Elias, attorney Albin Renauer, and Robin Leonard, J.D. (Nolo).
Chapter 13 bankruptcy is also known as "wage
earner" bankruptcy because, in order to file for Chapter 13, you
must have a reliable source of income that you can use to repay
some portion of your debt.
Repayment. When you file for
Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you must propose a repayment plan that
details how you are going to pay back your debts over the next
three to five years. The minimum amount you'll have to repay depends
on how much you earn, how much you owe, and how much your unsecured
creditors would have received if you'd filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Debt limits. Your debts must
be within limits set by the federal government: Currently, you
may not have more than $1,010, 650 in secured debt and $336,900
in unsecured debt.
Secured debts. If you have secured debts, Chapter
13 gives you an option to make up missed payments to avoid repossession
or foreclosure. You can include these past due amounts in your
repayment plan and make them up over time.
For more information on Chapter 13 bankruptcy, see
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Repay Your Debts, by attorney
Stephen Elias and Robin Leonard, J.D.
Other Types of Reorganization Bankruptcy Back
To List
In addition to Chapter 13 bankruptcy, there are two other types
of reorganization bankruptcy: Chapter 11 and Chapter 12.
Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Chapter 11 is typically
used by financially struggling businesses to reorganize their
affairs. It is also available to individuals, but because Chapter
11 bankruptcy is expensive and time-consuming, it is generally
used only by those whose debts exceed the Chapter 13 bankruptcy
limits (rare) or who own substantial nonexempt assets (such as
several pieces of real estate). If you are considering Chapter
11 bankruptcy, you'll need to talk to a lawyer.
Chapter 12 bankruptcy. Chapter 12 is almost
identical to Chapter 13 bankruptcy. But to be eligible for Chapter
12 bankruptcy, at least 80% of your debts must arise from the
operation of a family farm. Chapter 12 bankruptcy has higher debt
ceilings to accommodate the large debts that may come with operating
a farm, and it offers the debtor more power to eliminate certain
types of liens. Very few people use Chapter 12 bankruptcy; if
you want to join their ranks, you should consult with a lawyer.
For more information on whether bankruptcy is the right choice,
see
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?, by
attorney Stephen Elias (Nolo).
How Bankruptcy Stops Your Creditors: The Automatic Stay Back
To List
After you file for bankruptcy,
the automatic stay offers potent legal protection against bill
collectors.
When you file for bankruptcy, something called
the automatic stay immediately stops any lawsuit filed against
you and most actions against your property by a creditor, collection
agency, or government entity. Especially if you are at risk of
being evicted, being foreclosed on, being found in contempt for
failure to pay child support, or losing such basic resources as
utility services, welfare, unemployment benefits, or your job
(because of a raft of wage garnishments), the automatic stay may
provide a powerful reason to file for bankruptcy.
What the Automatic Stay Can Prevent Back
To List
Here is how the automatic stay affects some common
emergencies:
- Utility disconnections. If you're behind
on a utility bill and the company is threatening to disconnect
your water, electric, gas, or telephone service, the automatic
stay will prevent the disconnection for at least 20 days. Although
the amount of a utility bill itself rarely justifies a bankruptcy
filing, preventing electrical service cutoff in January in New
England might be justification enough.
- Foreclosure. If your home mortgage
is being foreclosed on, the automatic stay temporarily stops
the proceedings, but the creditor will often be able to proceed
with the foreclosure sooner or later. If you are facing foreclosure,
Chapter 13 bankruptcy is usually a better remedy than Chapter
7 bankruptcy, if you want to keep your house.
- Eviction. If you are being evicted
from your home, the automatic stay may provide some help --
but the new bankruptcy law makes it easier for landlords to
proceed with evictions. If your landlord already has a judgment
of possession against you when you file, the automatic stay
won't affect these eviction proceedings; the landlord can continue
just as if you hadn't filed for bankruptcy. And if the landlord
alleges that you've been endangering the property or using controlled
substances there, the automatic stay won't do you much good,
either. In other cases, the automatic stay might buy you a few
days or weeks, but the landlord will probably ask the court
to lift the stay and allow the eviction -- and the court will
probably agree to do so.
- Collection of overpayments of public benefits.
If you receive public benefits and were overpaid, normally the
agency is entitled to collect the overpayment out of your future
checks. The automatic stay prevents this collection. However,
if you become ineligible for benefits, the automatic stay doesn't
prevent the agency from denying or terminating benefits for
that reason.
- Multiple wage garnishments. Filing
for bankruptcy stops garnishments dead in their tracks. (And
not only will you take home a full salary, but you also may
be able to discharge the debt in bankruptcy.) Although no more
than 25% of your wages may be taken to satisfy court judgments
(up to 50% for child support and alimony), many people file
for bankruptcy if more than one wage garnishment is threatened.
What the Automatic Stay Cannot Prevent Back
To List
In a few instances, the automatic stay won't help you.
- Certain tax proceedings. The IRS can
still audit you, issue a tax deficiency notice, demand a tax
return (which often leads to an audit), issue a tax assessment,
or demand payment of such an assessment. However, the automatic
stay does stop the IRS from issuing a tax lien or seizing your
property or income.
- Support actions. A lawsuit against
you seeking to establish paternity or to establish, modify,
or collect child support or alimony isn't stopped by your filing
for bankruptcy.
- Criminal proceedings. A criminal proceeding
that can be broken down into criminal and debt components will
be divided, and the criminal component won't be stopped by the
automatic stay. For example, if you were convicted of writing
a bad check, sentenced to community service, and ordered to
pay a fine, your obligation to do community service won't be
stopped by your filing for bankruptcy.
- Loans from a pension. Despite
the automatic stay, money can be withheld from your income to
repay a loan from certain types of pensions (including most
job-related pensions and IRAs).
- Multiple filings. If you
had a bankruptcy case pending during the previous year, then
the stay will automatically terminate after 30 days unless you,
the trustee, the U.S. Trustee, or a creditor asks for the stay
to continue and proves that the current case was filed in good
faith. If a creditor had a motion to lift the stay pending during
the previous case, the court will presume that you acted in
bad faith, and you'll have to overcome this presumption to get
the protection of the stay in your current case.
How Creditors Can Get Around the Automatic Stay
Back To List
Usually, a creditor can get around the automatic
stay by asking the bankruptcy court to remove ("lift") the stay,
if it is not serving its intended purpose. For example, say you
file for bankruptcy the day before your house is to be sold in
foreclosure. You have no equity in the house, you can't pay your
mortgage arrears, and you have no way of keeping the property.
The foreclosing creditor is apt to go to court soon after you
file for bankruptcy and ask for permission to proceed with the
foreclosure -- and that permission is likely to be granted.
For more information on the automatic stay and
how it might apply in your situation, see
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?, by
attorney Stephen Elias.
Eliminating Tax Debts in Bankruptcy Back
To List
Most taxes can't be eliminated
in bankruptcy, but some can.
You may hear radio commercials offering the hope
of eliminating tax debts in bankruptcy. But it's not as simple
as it sounds. Most tax debts can't be wiped out in bankruptcy
-- you'll continue to owe them at the end of a Chapter 7 bankruptcy
case, or you'll have to repay them in full in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy
repayment plan.
If you need to discharge tax debts, Chapter 7
bankruptcy will probably be the better option -- but only if your
debts qualify for discharge (see below) and you are eligible for
Chapter 7 bankruptcy
.
When You Can Discharge a Tax Debt Back
To List
You can discharge (wipe out) debts for federal
income taxes in Chapter 7 bankruptcy only if all of the
following conditions are true:
- The taxes are income taxes. Taxes other
than income, such as payroll taxes or fraud penalties, can never
be eliminated in bankruptcy.
- You did not commit fraud or willful evasion.
If you filed a fraudulent tax return or otherwise willfully
attempted to evade paying taxes, such as using a false Social
Security number on your tax return, bankruptcy can't help.
- The debt is at least three years old.
To eliminate a tax debt, the tax return must have been originally
due at least three years before you filed for bankruptcy.
- You filed a tax return. You must have
filed a tax return for the debt you wish to discharge at least
two years before filing for bankruptcy.
- You pass the "240-day rule." The income
tax debt must have been assessed by the IRS at least 240 days
before you file your bankruptcy petition, or must not have been
assessed yet. (This time limit may be extended if the IRS suspended
collection activity because of an offer in compromise or a previous
bankruptcy filing.)
You Can't Discharge a Federal Tax Lien Back
To List
If your taxes qualify for discharge in a Chapter
7 bankruptcy case, your victory may be bittersweet. This is because
bankruptcy will not wipe out prior recorded tax liens. A Chapter
7 bankruptcy will wipe out your personal obligation to pay the
debt, and prevent the IRS from going after your bank account or
wages, but if the IRS recorded a tax lien on your property before
you file for bankruptcy, the lien will remain on the property.
In effect, this means you'll have to pay off the tax lien in order
to sell the property.
To find out more about which debts you can eliminate
in bankruptcy, see
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?, by
attorney Stephen Elias (Nolo).
Filing Bankruptcy? Disclose Everything, Hide Nothing Back
To List
Hiding property from
a bankruptcy court could come back to haunt you.
Your bankruptcy papers are signed under penalty
of perjury, so you are swearing that everything in them is true.
One of the things you're swearing to is that your forms are complete,
because the forms ask you to list "all" property, income, and
debts. Filing incomplete or inaccurate bankruptcy forms can lead
to your case being dismissed -- or worse, if the court thinks
you omitted information or made false statements intentionally.
The law is not supposed to punish those who make
one or two honest mistakes. If you accidentally leave something
off your papers or misstate something on your forms, you can usually
correct your papers or explain the mistake to the trustee. But
if you leave out so much that it appears that you were careless,
the court can find that your actions demonstrate an indifference
to the truth and can dismiss your case on that basis.
If you deliberately attempt to hide assets or
use a false Social Security number, it will probably come back
to haunt you more profoundly than your current debt crisis.
Bankruptcy can't help you if you hide information.
If you fail to list creditors, the debts you owe them may not
be wiped out by your bankruptcy discharge. So, be sure to list
every person who claims that you owe them money -- even if you
don’t think you owe them a cent. In this situation, you
can indicate that the debt is "disputed." If the debt is already
the subject of a pending lawsuit, the debt can be listed as "contingent"
-- that is, it depends on how the lawsuit comes out.
When your bankruptcy is finished, you will no
longer owe any debts that have been discharged. If a disputed
debt is discharged, the entire dispute will be irrelevant. The
creditor will be legally barred from collecting anything more
from you regardless of who is right.
Don't Omit Creditors Just Because You Like Them Back
To List
Some filers consider omitting creditors whom they like -- such
as a relative or a friendly local business person -- to avoid
having that debt wiped out. This is a bad idea, no matter how
honorable your intentions.
Bankruptcy doesn't allow you to play favorites. In fact, a central
purpose of bankruptcy is to make sure that all of your creditors
get their fair share of what you have, and that certain obligations
(like child support) are not shortchanged. If the bankruptcy trustee
learns that you've omitted creditors from your list, you'll have
to add them, and it will raise suspicion about other statements
on your forms.
Include Money You May Have Coming to You Back
To List
When you list your property on the bankruptcy forms, you must
include not only property you have when you file, but also property
that you may have coming to you. Here are some examples:
- an inheritance from a recently deceased relative
that you have not yet received
- stock options, trust funds, or tax refunds
- pensions, retirement funds, annuities, and
life insurance, and
- judgments from lawsuits you've filed or could
file, arising from a personal injury or other matter.
All of these are examples of property that you
must list on your forms. You may get to keep some or all of this
property by claiming it as exempt, but you must list it so that
the trustee has a complete picture of all of your finances.
Don't Deliberately Hide Assets or Other Financial
Details Back To List
If you deliberately fail to disclose property,
omit material information about your financial affairs, or use
a false Social Security number to hide your identity as a prior
filer, and the court discovers your action, your case will be
dismissed and you may be prosecuted for fraud. The punishment
for fraud is serious: Jail time is not unusual for those who try
to hide property from the court and get caught.
A Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Overview Back
To List
How Chapter 7 bankruptcy
works.
Chapter 7 bankruptcy is sometimes called "liquidation"
bankruptcy -- it cancels your debts, but you might have to let
the bankruptcy court liquidate (sell) some of your property for
the benefit of your creditors. ("Chapter 7" refers to the chapter
of the federal Bankruptcy Code that contains the bankruptcy law.)
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Costs in Time and Money
Back To List
The whole Chapter 7 bankruptcy process takes
about four to six months, costs $299 in filing and administrative
fees, and commonly requires only one trip to the courthouse.
You must also complete credit counseling with
an agency approved by the United States Trustee. (For a list of
approved agencies in each state, go to the Trustee's website,
www.usdoj.gov/ust, and click "Credit Counseling and Debtor Education.")
You won't be able to use Chapter 7 bankruptcy
if you already received a bankruptcy discharge in the last six
to eight years (depending which type of bankruptcy you filed)
or if, based on your income, expenses, and debt burden, you could
feasibly complete a Chapter 13 repayment plan. (For more information
on these eligibility requirements, see
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy -- Who Can File?)
To file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you fill out
a petition and a number of other forms and file them with the
bankruptcy court in your area. Basically, the forms ask you to
describe:
- your property
- your current income and monthly living expenses
- your debts
- property you claim the law allows you to keep
through the Chapter 7 bankruptcy process (called "exempt property")
-- most states let you keep some equity in your home, clothing,
household furnishings, Social Security payments you haven't
spent, and other necessities such as a car and the tools of
your trade.
- property you owned and money you spent during
the previous two years, and
- property you sold or gave away during the
previous two years.
You'll find step-by-step instructions for filling
out all of the required forms in
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen Elias,
Albin Renauer, and Robin Leonard (Nolo).
Bankruptcy's Magic Wand -- The Automatic Stay
Back To List
Filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy puts into effect
an "Order for Relief" -- known informally as the "automatic stay."
The automatic stay immediately stops most creditors from trying
to collect what you owe them. So, at least temporarily, creditors
cannot legally grab ("garnish") your wages, empty your bank account,
go after your car, house, or other property, or cut off your utility
service or welfare benefits. For more information, see
How Bankruptcy Stops Your Creditors: The Automatic Stay.
Bankruptcy Court's Control Over Your Financial
Affairs Back To List
By filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you are technically
placing the property you own and the debts you owe in the hands
of the bankruptcy court. You can't sell or give away any of the
property you own when you file, or pay off your pre-filing debts,
without the court's consent. However, with a few exceptions, you
can do what you wish with property you acquire and income you
earn after you file for bankruptcy.
The Bankruptcy Trustee for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Back
To List
The court exercises its control through a court-appointed person
called a "bankruptcy trustee." The trustee's primary duty is to
see that your creditors are paid as much as possible on what you
owe them. And the more assets the trustee recovers for creditors,
the more the trustee is paid.
The trustee (or the trustee's staff) will examine your papers
to make sure they are complete and to look for nonexempt property
to sell for the benefit of creditors. The trustee will also look
at your financial transactions during the previous year to see
if any can be undone to free up assets to distribute to your creditors.
In most Chapter 7 bankruptcy cases, the trustee finds nothing
of value to sell.
A week or two after you file, you (and all the creditors you
list in your bankruptcy papers) will receive a notice that a "creditors
meeting" has been scheduled. The bankruptcy trustee runs the meeting
and, after swearing you in, may ask you questions about your bankruptcy
and the papers you filed. In the vast majority of Chapter 7 bankruptcies,
this is the debtor's only visit to the courthouse.
What Happens to Your Property Back
To List
If, after the creditors meeting, the trustee determines that
you have some nonexempt property, you may be required to either
surrender that property or provide the trustee with its equivalent
value in cash. If the property isn't worth very much or would
be cumbersome for the trustee to sell, the trustee may "abandon"
the property -- which means that you get to keep it, even though
it is nonexempt. (For information on which types of property are
typically exempt, see
When Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Isn't the Right Choice. However, which
property is exempt varies by state -- you can find complete lists
of exempt property for every state in
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen Elias,
Albin Renauer, and Robin Leonard (Nolo).)
Most property owned by Chapter 7 debtors is either exempt or
is essentially worthless for purposes of raising money for the
creditors. As a result, few debtors end up having to surrender
any property, unless it is collateral for a secured debt (see
below).
How Your Secured Debts Are Treated Back
To List
If you've pledged property as collateral for a loan, the loan
is called a secured debt. The most common examples of collateral
are houses and automobiles. If you're behind on your payments,
the creditor can ask to have the automatic stay lifted in order
to repossess or foreclose on the property. However, if you are
current on your payments, you can keep the property and keep making
payments as before -- unless you have enough equity in the property
to justify its sale by the trustee.
If a creditor has recorded a lien against your property because
of a debt you haven't paid (for example, because the creditor
obtained a court judgment against you), that debt is also secured.
You may be able to wipe out the lien in Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
The Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Discharge Back
To List
At the end of the bankruptcy process, all of your debts are wiped
out (discharged) by the court, except:
- debts that automatically survive bankruptcy,
such as child support, most tax debts, and student loans, unless
the court rules otherwise, and
- debts that the court has declared nondischargeable
because the creditor objected (for example, debts incurred by
your fraud or malicious acts).
For more information and step-by-step help filing
for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, see
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen Elias,
Albin Renauer, and Robin Leonard (Nolo).
The Bankruptcy Means Test: Is Your Income Low
Enough for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy? Back
To List
A means test calculator
can determine whether you qualify for Chapter 7 bankruptcy --
try one online.
The "means test" is a formula designed to keep
filers with higher incomes from filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Only bankruptcy filers with primarily consumer debts, not business
debts, need to take the means test. High income filers who fail
the means test may use Chapter 13 bankruptcy to repay a portion
of their debts, but may not use Chapter 7 bankruptcy to wipe out
their debts altogether.
However, having to take the Chapter 7 means test
doesn't mean that you must be penniless in order to use Chapter
7 bankruptcy. You can earn significant monthly income and still
qualify for Chapter 7 bankruptcy if you have a lot of expenses,
such as a high mortgage payment. This article shows you simple
ways to determine whether you can pass the means test -- and,
therefore, use Chapter 7 -- if you were to file for bankruptcy.
How Does the Chapter 7 Means Test Work? Back
To List
The means test was designed to limit the use
of Chapter 7 bankruptcy to those who truly can't pay their debts.
It does this by deducting specific monthly expenses from your
"current monthly income" (your average income over the six calendar
months before you file for bankruptcy) to arrive at your monthly
"disposable income." The higher your disposable income, the more
likely you won’t be allowed to use Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
To take the means test, you must first determine
whether your income is more or less than the median income in
your state. If you earn more than the median, you must figure
out whether you would have enough left over, after subtracting
certain expenses, to repay some of your debt.
Is Your Income More Than the Median? Back
To List
The first step is simple: If your current monthly
income is less than the median income for a household of your
size in for your state, you pass. Period. You're done. You do
not need to complete the rest of the means test. You can file
for Chapter 7.
Do You Have Enough Disposable Income to Repay
Some Debts? Back
To List
For those whose household income exceeds the
state median, the means test computations get significantly more
complex. You must determine whether you have enough income left
over (called "disposable income"), after paying your "allowed"
monthly expenses, to pay off at least a portion of your unsecured
debts (such as credit card bills). If your disposable income adds
up to more than a certain amount, you fail the means test and
cannot file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Median income levels vary by state and household
size, and each county and metropolitan region has different allowed
amounts for categories of expenses: basic necessities, housing,
and transportation. But don't worry: You can get through the math
with the help of an online calculator.
Use a Chapter 7 Means Test Online Calculator
Back To List
If you're looking for an easy way to determine
your eligibility under the Chapter 7 means test, use our online
means test calculator, created by the author of Nolo's book
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, Albin Renauer,
J.D. Once you enter your zip code, the calculator uses the applicable
income and expense standards for your state, county, and region
to determine your eligibility.
You’ll have to supply some income and expense
information, but the calculator will save you the trouble of looking
up income and expense figures for your area and doing the math.
And, if you decide to file for Chapter7 bankruptcy, you can use
these figures on your official paperwork (the calculator closely
follows the format of the means test form, Official Form 22A,
that you must complete when you file for bankruptcy).
If You Pass the Chapter 7 Means Test Back
To List
Just because you qualify under the means test
does not necessarily mean you should file for Chapter 7
bankruptcy -- merely that you can. Any decision to file
for Chapter 7 bankruptcy should be made only after considering
alternatives and other factors discussed in other articles on
this website or in Nolo's
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?, by Attorney
Stephen Elias.
Once you've made your decision to go ahead and
file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, Nolo's book
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen Elias,
Albin Renauer, and Robin Leonard, can walk you step by step through
the filing process.
If You Don't Pass the Chapter 7 Means Test Back
To List
If you don’t pass the means test, you are
limited to using Chapter 13 bankruptcy, which requires you to
make monthly payments over a five-year period according to a strict
budget monitored by the court. Most people who file for bankruptcy
prefer Chapter 7, which requires no repayment. However, Chapter
13 bankruptcy is still the best way to handle specific types of
problems, like curing a default on a mortgage. (See
Reasons to Use Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Instead of Chapter 7 Bankruptcy.)
For help filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, see
Nolo's
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Repay Your Debts, by Stephen Elias
and Robin Leonard.
When Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Isn't the Right Choice Back
To List
Chapter 7 bankruptcy
may make you sacrifice property, yet not discharge all your debt.
If you are inclined to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
take a moment to decide whether it makes economic sense. You need
to consider three questions:
- Are you judgment proof -- that is, are creditors
legally barred from taking your property or income even if you
don't file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy?
- Will Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharge enough
of your debts to make it worth your while?
- Will you have to give up property you really
want to keep?
Most unsecured creditors are required to obtain
a court judgment before they can start collection procedures,
such as a wage garnishment or seizure of personal property. (Collections
for taxes, child support, and student loans are exceptions to
this general rule.)
If your debts are mainly of the type that require
a judgment, the next question is whether you have any income or
property that your creditors can seize if they go to the trouble
of obtaining a judgment. For instance, if all of your income comes
from Social Security (which can’t be taken by creditors),
and all of your property is exempt, there is nothing your creditors
can take from you to satisfy their judgment. That makes you "judgment
proof."
While you may still wish to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy to get
a fresh start, nothing bad will happen to you if you don’t
file, no matter how much you owe.
Will Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Discharge Enough of Your Debts? Back
To List
Certain categories of debts cannot be discharged in Chapter 7
bankruptcy. It doesn't make much sense to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy
if your primary goal is to eliminate these nondischargeable debts.
The main nondischargeable debts are:
- back child support and alimony obligations
- student loans, unless repayment would cause
you undue hardship
- income taxes less than three years past due
- recent debts for luxuries (more than $550
to any one creditor incurred within 90 days before you file
for bankruptcy, and cash advances of more than $825 within 70
days before you file), and
- court judgments for injuries or death to someone
arising from your intoxicated driving.
The bankruptcy judge may rule some types of debts
as nondischargeable if the creditor objects to a discharge in
the bankruptcy court. These debts include:
- debts incurred on the basis of fraud, such
as lying on a credit application or writing a bad check
- debts from willful or malicious injury to
another or another's property
- debts from larceny (theft), breach of trust,
or embezzlement, or
- debts arising out of a marital settlement
agreement or divorce decree that aren't otherwise automatically
nondischargeable as support or alimony.
If the bulk of your indebtedness is from debts
that creditors may object to being discharged, it may still make
sense to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and hope your creditors
don't object.
Codebtors will still be on the hook. If you want
to discharge debts for which you have a codebtor (such as someone
who cosigned a loan for you, or a business partner who is equally
liable for the debt), bankruptcy won't wipe out the debt. If the
debt is of a type that can be discharged in Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
you will no longer be legally responsible for paying it, but your
codebtor will.
How Much Property Will You Have to Give Up? Back
To List
Whether or not you decide to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy may
depend on what property of yours will be taken to pay your creditors
("nonexempt" property) and what property you get to keep ("exempt"
property).
Certain kinds of property are exempt in almost every state, while
others are almost never exempt. The following are items you can
typically keep (exempt property):
- motor vehicles, up to a certain value
- reasonably necessary clothing (no mink coats)
- reasonably needed household furnishings and
goods (the second TV may have to go)
- household appliances
- jewelry, up to a certain value
- personal effects
- life insurance (cash or loan value, or the
proceeds of life insurance), up to a certain value
- pensions
- part of the equity in your home
- tools of your trade or profession, up to a
certain value
- a portion of unpaid but earned wages, and
- public benefits (welfare, Social Security,
unemployment compensation) accumulated in a bank account.
Items you must typically give up (nonexempt property)
include:
- expensive musical instruments (unless you're
a professional musician)
- stamp, coin, and other collections
- family heirlooms
- cash, bank accounts, stocks, bonds, and other
investments
- a second car or truck, and
- a second or vacation home.
Is Chapter 7 Bankruptcy More Than You Need?
Back To List
You may be considering bankruptcy just to stop
harassment by your creditors. However, in most cases, you can
stop creditors from making telephone calls to your home or work
by simply telling them to stop. For more information, see
What to Do If a Bill Collector Crosses the Line.
Deciding Whether to File Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
Back To List
If you determine that you are judgment proof,
that you'll be stuck with significant debt following bankruptcy,
or that you may have to give up too much property, Chapter 7 bankruptcy
may not make sense for you. For a discussion of other options,
including the possibility of doing nothing, see
Alternatives to Bankruptcy.
When Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Is Better than Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
Back To List
Chapter 7 bankruptcy
has some significant advantages over Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
Most people who file for bankruptcy choose Chapter
7 bankruptcy because it's fast, effective, easy to file, and doesn't
require payments over time.
Advantages of Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Back
To List
A typical Chapter 7 bankruptcy case is opened
and closed within three to six months, and the person filing emerges
debt-free except for a mortgage, car payments, and certain types
of debts that survive bankruptcy, such as student loans, recent
taxes, and unpaid child support.
Although you can lose property in Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
most filers don't. Bankruptcy lets you keep most necessities --
if you have little to begin with, chances are good you'll be able
to keep all or most of your property (unless you pledged the item
as collateral for a loan).
However, not everyone is eligible to use Chapter
7 bankruptcy. If your income is sufficient to fund a Chapter 13
repayment plan, after subtracting what you'll spend on certain
allowed expenses and monthly payments for child support, tax debts,
secured debts (such as a mortgage or car loan), and a few other
types of debts, you won't be allowed to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Drawbacks of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Back
To List
Probably the main reason most people prefer Chapter
7 bankruptcy is that it doesn't require you to repay any portion
of your debts, as Chapter 13 bankruptcy does. And if you use Chapter
13 bankruptcy, you must complete the entire three- to five-year
repayment plan in order to have your remaining debts discharged
(unless the court lets you off the hook early, for hardship reasons).
The majority of those who file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy don't
complete their plans, so filers run a very real risk that their
debts won't ultimately be discharged.
Despite this major potential drawback, there
are some good reasons why people who are eligible for both types
of bankruptcy choose to use Chapter 13.
For help filing a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, see
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen Elias,
Albin Renauer, and Robin Leonard (Nolo).
An Overview of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Back
To List
The basic steps involved
in a typical Chapter 13 bankruptcy case.
Chapter 13 bankruptcy, sometimes called reorganization
bankruptcy, is quite different from Chapter 7 bankruptcy. In a
Chapter 7 bankruptcy, most of your debts are wiped out; in exchange,
you must relinquish any property that isn't exempt from seizure
by your creditors. In a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you don't have
to hand over any property, but you must use your income to pay
some or all of what you owe to your creditors over time -- from
three to five years, depending on the size of your debts and income.
Chapter 13 bankruptcy isn't for everyone. Because
Chapter 13 requires you to use your income to repay some or all
of your debt, you'll have to prove to the court that you can afford
to meet your payment obligations. If your income is irregular
or too low, the court might not allow you to file for Chapter
13.
If your total debt burden is too high, you are
also ineligible. Your secured debts cannot exceed $1,010,650,
and your unsecured debts cannot be more than $336,900. A "secured
debt" is one that gives a creditor the right to take a specific
item of property (such as your house or car) if you don't pay
the debt. An "unsecured debt" (such as a credit card or medical
bill) doesn't give the creditor this right.
Before you can file for bankruptcy, you must
receive credit counseling from an agency approved by the United
States Trustee's office. (For a list of approved agencies, go
to the Trustee's website at
www.usdoj.gov/ust and click "Credit Counseling and Debtor
Education.") These agencies are allowed to charge a fee for their
services, but they must provide counseling for free or at reduced
rates if you cannot afford to pay.
In addition, you'll have to pay the filing fee,
which is currently $274, and file numerous forms. For line-by-line
instructions on filling out the required bankruptcy forms, see
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Keep Your Property & Repay Debts
Over Time, by Stephen Elias and Robin Leonard (Nolo).
The Chapter 13 Repayment Plan Back
To List
The most important part of your Chapter 13 paperwork will be
a repayment plan. Your repayment plan will describe in detail
how (and how much) you will pay each of your debts. There is no
official form for the plan, but many courts have designed their
own forms.
Your Chapter 13 plan must pay certain debts in full. These debts
are called "priority debts," because they're considered sufficiently
important to jump to the head of the bankruptcy repayment line.
Priority debts include child support and alimony, wages you owe
to employees, and certain tax obligations.
In addition, your plan must include your regular payments on
secured debts, such as a car loan or mortgage, as well as repayment
of any arrearages on the debts (the amount by which you've fallen
behind in your payments).
The plan must show that any disposable income you have left after
making these required payments will go towards repaying your unsecured
debts, such as credit card or medical bills. You don't have to
repay these debts in full (or at all, in some cases). You just
have to show that you are putting any remaining income towards
their repayment.
How Long Your Repayment Plan Will Last Back
To List
The length of your repayment plan depends on
how much you earn and how much you owe. If your average monthly
income over the six months prior to the date you filed for bankruptcy
is more than the median income for your state, you'll have to
propose a five-year plan. If your income is lower than the median,
you may propose a three-year plan. (To get the median income figures
for your state, go to the United States Trustee's website,
www.usdoj.gov/ust, and click "Means Testing Information.")
No matter how much you earn, your plan will end
if you repay all of your debts in full, even if you have not yet
reached the three- or five-year mark.
If You Can’t Make Plan Payments Back
To List
If for some reason you cannot finish a Chapter 13 repayment plan
-- for example, you lose your job six months into the plan and
can’t keep up the payments -- the bankruptcy trustee may
modify your plan, or the court might let you discharge your
debts on the basis of hardship. Examples of hardship would be
a sudden plant closing in a one-factory town or a debilitating
illness.
If the bankruptcy court won’t let you modify your plan or
give you a hardship discharge, you might be able to convert to
a Chapter 7 bankruptcy or ask the bankruptcy court to dismiss
your Chapter 13 bankruptcy case (you would still owe your debts,
plus any interest creditors did not charge while your Chapter
13 case was pending). For information on your alternatives in
this situation, see
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Keep Your Property & Repay Debts
Over Time, by Stephen Elias and Robin Leonard (Nolo).
How a Chapter 13 Case Ends Back
To List
Once you complete your repayment plan, all remaining
debts that are eligible for discharge will be wiped out. Before
you can receive a discharge, you must show the court that you
are current on your child support and/or alimony obligations and
that you have completed a budget counseling course with an agency
approved by the United States Trustee. (This requirement is separate
from the mandatory credit counseling you must undergo before
filing for bankruptcy -- you can find a list of approved agencies
at the Trustee's website,
www.usdoj.gov/ust; click "Credit Counseling and Debtor Education.")
For more information, see
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Keep Your Property & Repay Debts
Over Time, by Stephen Elias and Robin Leonard (Nolo).
Are You Eligible for Chapter 13 Bankruptcy?
Back To List
Learn whether Chapter
13 bankruptcy is an option for you.
Chapter 13 bankruptcy is a good option for some
debtors, but it isn't available to everyone.
Businesses Can't File for Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
Back To List
A business, even a sole proprietorship, cannot
file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy in the name of that business. Businesses
are steered toward Chapter 11 bankruptcy when they need help reorganizing
their debts.
If you own a business, however, you can file
for Chapter 13 bankruptcy as an individual. You can include in
your Chapter 13 bankruptcy case business-related debts for which
you are personally liable. There is one exception to this rule:
Stockbrokers and commodity brokers cannot file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy
case, even if they want to discharge only personal (nonbusiness)
debts.
You Must Have Sufficient Disposable Income Back
To List
In order to qualify for Chapter 13, you will have to show the
bankruptcy court that you will have enough income, after subtracting
certain allowed expenses and required payments on secured debts
(such as a car loan or mortgage), to meet your repayment obligations.
Your plan must pay back certain debts in full, or the judge will
not confirm (approve) it and allow you to proceed.
You can use the income from the following sources to fund a Chapter
13 plan:
- regular wages or salary
- income from self-employment
- wages from seasonal work
- commissions from sales or other work
- pension payments
- Social Security benefits
- disability or workers' compensation benefits
- unemployment benefits, strike benefits, and
the like
- public benefits (welfare payments)
- child support or alimony you receive
- royalties and rents, and
- proceeds from selling property, especially
if selling property is your primary business.
If you are married, your income does not necessarily
have to be "yours." A nonworking spouse can file alone and use
money from a working spouse as a source of income. And an unemployed
spouse can file jointly with a working spouse.
Your Debts Must Not Be Too High Back
To List
You do not qualify for Chapter 13 bankruptcy
if your secured debts exceed $1,010,650. (This amount is adjusted
for inflation every three years; the last increase took effect
on April 1, 2007.) A debt is secured if you stand to lose specific
property if you don't make your payments to the creditor. Home
loans and car loans are the most common examples of secured debts.
But a debt might also be secured if a creditor -- such as the
IRS -- has filed a lien (notice of claim) against your property.
In addition, for you to be eligible for Chapter
13 bankruptcy, your unsecured debts cannot exceed $336,900. (This
amount is also increased every three years.) An unsecured
debt doesn't give the creditor a right to take a particular piece
of property. Most debts are unsecured, including credit
card debts, medical and legal bills, back utility bills, and department
store charges.
You Must Be Current on Your Income Tax Filings
Back To List
To file for Chapter 13, you will have to submit
proof that you filed your federal and state income tax returns
for the four tax years prior to your bankruptcy filing date. If
you need some time to get current on your filings, the court can
postpone the proceedings. Ultimately, however, if you don't produce
your returns or transcripts of the returns for those four years,
your Chapter 13 case will be dismissed.
For more information on Chapter 13's eligibility
requirements, see
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Keep Your Property & Repay Debts Over
Time, by Robin Leonard and Stephen Elias (Nolo).
Reasons to Use Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Instead of Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
Back To List
Sometimes it makes sense
to file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy instead of Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Many debtors choose not to file for Chapter 13
bankruptcy because it requires repayment of at least a portion
of their debts (unlike Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which wipes out many
debts entirely
).
In some situations, however, Chapter 13 bankruptcy
is the better bankruptcy option. Not only that, but certain debtors
don't get to choose: Not everyone is eligible for Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
so Chapter 13 will by the only option available to some filers.
Here are some good reasons to file for Chapter
13:
You cannot file for Chapter 7.
You won't be allowed to file for Chapter 7 if you cannot meet
some new requirements imposed by the 2005 revisions to the bankruptcy
law. Under these new rules, you cannot file for Chapter 7 if both
of the following are true:
- Your current monthly income over the six months
prior to your filing date is more than the median income for
a household of your size in your state (go to the website of
the United States Trustee,
www.usdoj.gov/ust, and click "Means Testing Information" to
see the median figures for your state).
- Your disposable income, after subtracting
certain expenses and monthly payments for debts you would have
to repay in Chapter 13, exceeds certain limits set by law. These
calculations are commonly referred to as the "means test" --
if you have the means to repay a certain amount of your debt
through a Chapter 13 repayment plan, you flunk the test and
are ineligible for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. (For more information,
including a link to an online calculator you can use to see
whether you pass the means test, see
The Bankruptcy Means Test: Is Your Income Low Enough for Chapter
7 Bankruptcy?)
The means test can get fairly complex -- and,
to make matter worse, Congress has its own definitions of "disposable
income," "current monthly income," "expenses," and other important
terms, which sometimes operate to make your income seem higher
than it actually is. You can find step-by-step instructions to
determine if you qualify for Chapter 7 under these new rules in
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, by attorney Stephen
Elias, attorney Albin Renauer, and Robin Leonard, J.D. (Nolo).
In addition, if you have received a Chapter 7
bankruptcy discharge within the last eight years, or a Chapter
13 discharge within the last six years, you may not file for Chapter
7 bankruptcy.
You are behind on your mortgage or car loan,
and want to make up the missed payments over time and reinstate
the original agreement. You cannot do this in Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
You can make up missed payments only in Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
You have a tax obligation, student loan,
or other debt that cannot be discharged in Chapter 7.
You can include these debts in your Chapter 13 plan and pay them
off over time.
You have a sincere desire to repay your debts,
but you need the protection of the bankruptcy court to do so.
This might be the case if creditors are coming after you, or if
you simply require the formal structure and deadlines the Chapter
13 process provides in order to follow through on your good intentions.
You have nonexempt property that you want
to keep. When you file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you get to
keep only exempt
property -- property that is protected from creditors
under state or federal law. You have to give your nonexempt property
to the bankruptcy trustee, who can sell it and distribute the
proceeds to your creditors.
In Chapter 13, you don't have to give up any
property. Instead, you repay your debts out of your income. So,
if you have nonexempt property that you can't bear to part with,
Chapter 13 might be the better choice.
You have a codebtor on a personal debt.
If you file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, your codebtor will still
be on the hook -- and your creditor will undoubtedly go after
the codebtor for payment. If you file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy,
the creditor will leave your codebtor alone, as long as you keep
up with your bankruptcy plan payments.
For more help deciding which bankruptcy is right
for you, see
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?, by attorney
Stephen Elias (Nolo). Or, for help filing Chapter 13, see
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Repay Your Debts, by attorney
Stephen Elias and Robin Leonard, J.D. (Nolo).
Your Obligations Under a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
Plan Back To List
Learn which debts you
must pay back when you file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
To begin a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you fill out
a packet of forms -- mostly the same forms as you would use in
a Chapter 7 bankruptcy -- listing your income, property, expenses,
and debts. You file these forms and paperwork with a nearby bankruptcy
court. You must also file a workable payment plan proposing how
you plan to handle your debts over the payment plan period.
You must also file your tax return for the previous
year, proof that you've filed your tax returns for the last four
years, and a certificate showing that you've completed credit
counseling with an agency approved by the United States Trustee
(go to
www.usdoj.gov/ust, then click "Credit Counseling and Debtor Education"
for a list of approved agencies).
Under a Chapter 13 plan, you make payments, usually
monthly, to the bankruptcy trustee, an official appointed by the
bankruptcy court to oversee your case. The trustee in turn pays
your creditors and collects a statutory commission based on the
amounts paid out under your plan. You must make every payment,
on time, in order to successfully complete your plan and get a
discharge of your remaining debts.
How Much You'll Have to Pay Back
To List
Some creditors are entitled to receive 100% of
what you owe them, while others may receive a much smaller percentage
(or nothing at all). Typically, Chapter 13 bankruptcy plans must
provide that:
Administrative claims will be paid 100%.
These include:
- your filing fee ($274)
- the trustee's commission (3% to 10% of each
monthly payment), and
- attorney's fees, if you hire an attorney for
help with your Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
Priority debts will be paid 100%. These
include:
- back alimony and child support
- most tax debts (including state and federal
income taxes)
- wages, salaries, or commissions you owe to
employees, and
- contributions you owe to an employee benefit
fund.
Mortgage defaults will be paid 100% if
you want to keep your house.
Other secured debt defaults will be paid 100%
if you want to keep the property. Missed car payments fall into
this category.
Unsecured debts will be paid anywhere from 0% to 100%
of what you owe. The exact amount depends on:
- the total value of your nonexempt property
- the amount of disposable income you have each
month to put toward your debts, and
- how long your plan lasts.
Your payment plan must commit to paying any leftover
disposable income (your income less certain allowed expenses and
payments on secured loans, such as a mortgage or car loan) towards
your unsecured debts, such as credit card debts and medical bills.
The length of your payment plan depends on your
income level. If your "current monthly income" (your average income
over the six months prior to filing) exceeds the median monthly
income for a household of your size in your state, your plan must
last five years. If your income is less than the median, you can
propose a three-year plan, even if your unsecured creditors cannot
be fully repaid during that time. (To find the median income figures
for your state, go to the United States Trustee's website,
www.usdoj.gov/ust, and click "Means Testing Information.")
Your "current" monthly income might
be out of date. Because your current monthly income,
as calculated above, is an average, it may well be more than your
actual monthly income at the time you file. For instance, if you
were laid off unexpectedly three months before filing, your monthly
income when you file may be quite low -- as compared to your average
income over the last six months, which will have to include three
months of your salary.
No Surrender of Property Back
To List
If you file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you don't
have to hand over any of your property; instead, you repay your
debts out of your income. In exchange for getting to keep your
property, your plan will have to pay your creditors at least the
value of your nonexempt property. (In
Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you must surrender your nonexempt property
to the trustee, who can sell it and distribute the proceeds to
your creditors. You do get to keep property that is exempt.)
For more information on Chapter 13 bankruptcy,
see
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Repay Your Debts, by attorney
Stephen Elias and Robin Leonard, J.D.
Bankruptcy FAQ (Chapter 7 and Chapter 13) Back
To List
Chapter 7 bankruptcy and Chapter 13 bankruptcy: what you need
to know.
What's Below:
What exactly is
bankruptcy? Will it wipe out all my debts?
What is the difference
between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy? Which one lets me
keep my property?
Am I free to choose
between Chapter 7 bankruptcy and Chapter 13 bankruptcy? Which
type of bankruptcy should I use?
What exactly
is bankruptcy? Will it wipe out all my debts? Back
To List
Bankruptcy is a federal court process designed
to help consumers and businesses eliminate their debts or repay
them under the protection of the bankruptcy court. Bankruptcies
can generally be described as "liquidation" (Chapter 7) or "reorganization"
(Chapter 13). Under a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you ask the bankruptcy
court to wipe out (discharge) the debts you owe. Under a Chapter
13 bankruptcy, you file a plan with the bankruptcy court proposing
how you will repay your creditors. You must repay some debts in
full; others may be repaid only partially or not at all, depending
on what you can afford.
When you file either kind of bankruptcy, a court
order called an "automatic stay" goes into effect. The automatic
stay prohibits most creditors from taking any action to collect
the debts you owe them unless the bankruptcy court lifts the stay
and lets the creditor proceed with collections.
Certain debts cannot be discharged in bankruptcy;
you will continue to owe them just as if you had never filed for
bankruptcy. These debts include back child support, alimony, and
certain kinds of tax debts. Student loans will not be discharged
unless you can show that repaying the debt would be an undue burden,
which is a very tough standard to meet. And other types of debts
might not be discharged if a creditor convinces the court that
the debt should survive your bankruptcy.
Back to current section
What
is the difference between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy?
Which one lets me keep my property? Back
To List
In Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you ask the bankruptcy
court to discharge most of the debts you owe. In exchange for
this discharge, the bankruptcy trustee can take any property you
own that is not exempt from collection (see below), sell it, and
distribute the proceeds to your creditors.
In Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you file a repayment
plan with the bankruptcy court to pay back all or a portion of
your debts over time. The amount you'll have to repay depends
on how much you earn, the amount and types of debt you owe, and
how much property you own.
You lose no property in Chapter 13 bankruptcy,
because you fund your repayment plan through your income. In Chapter
7 bankruptcy, you select property you are eligible to keep from
a list of state exemptions. Although state exemption laws differ,
states typically allow you to keep these types of property in
a Chapter 7 bankruptcy:
- Equity in your home, called a homestead
exemption. Under the Bankruptcy Code, you can exempt up
to $20,200 of equity. Some states have no homestead exemption;
others allow debtors to protect all or most of the equity in
their home.
- Insurance. You usually get to keep
the cash value of your policies.
- Retirement plans. Most retirement
benefits are protected in bankruptcy.
- Personal property. You'll be able
to keep most household goods, furniture, furnishings, clothing
(other than furs), appliances, books and musical instruments.
You may be able to keep jewelry only worth up to $1,000 or so.
Most states let you keep a vehicle as long as your equity doesn't
exceed several thousand dollars. And many states give you a
"wild card" amount of money -- often $1,000 or more -- that
you can apply toward any property.
- Public benefits. All public benefits,
such as welfare, Social Security, and unemployment insurance,
are fully protected.
- Tools used on your job. You'll probably
be able to keep up to a few thousand dollars worth of the tools
used in your trade or profession.
Back to current section
Am
I free to choose between Chapter 7 bankruptcy and Chapter 13 bankruptcy?
Which type of bankruptcy should I use? Back
To List
If you meet the eligibility requirements for
both types of bankruptcy, then you can choose the type of bankruptcy
that makes the most sense for your situation. However, you may
not have a choice.
Under the new bankruptcy law, filers whose incomes
are higher than the median income for a family of their size in
their state may not be allowed to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy
if their disposable income, after subtracting certain allowed
expenses and required debt payments, would allow them to pay back
some portion of the unsecured debt over a five-year repayment
period.
Also, if you have secured debts of more than
$1,010,650 and unsecured debts of more than $336,900, for example,
then you cannot use Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
Most people who file for bankruptcy choose to
use Chapter 7, if they meet the eligibility requirements; Chapter
7 is a popular choice because, unlike Chapter 13, it doesn't require
filers to pay back any portion of their debts.
However, Chapter 13 might be a better choice,
depending on your situation. For example, if you are behind on
your mortgage and want to keep your house, you can include your
missed payments in your Chapter 13 plan and repay them over time.
In Chapter 7, you would have to make up the whole past due amount
right away -- and you might lose your house, if your equity exceeds
the exemption amount available to you. For more on situations
when Chapter 13 makes sense, see
Reasons to Use Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Instead of Chapter 7 Bankruptcy.
Back to current section
Legal Information provided, with permission, by Nolo.
NOTE:Disclaimer
- Legal information is not legal advice
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