Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
Chapter 13 is a type of bankruptcy that is increasing
in popularity but is not well understood by many.
Unlike chapter 7 where the debtors lose their assets
and immediately start over, chapter 13 allows debtors
to keep their assets in exchange for adopting a
court-approved "plan" to repay all or
a portion of their debts out of their future income
for the next 5 or more years. The debtor's plan
must provide that the debtor will pay all of his
disposable income (the amount of money the debtor
has left over after paying his current year's taxes
and "necessary living expenses") to his
creditors every month. It doesn't matter how little
this monthly payment is, as long as it is large
enough to pay certain "priority" debts
in full during the life of the plan. In exchange
for successfully completing the plan, the debtor
receives a discharge from all debts to the extent
not paid during the plan.
Why can this be better than filing a chapter 7?
Chapter 13 can be useful in several situations.
It allows a homeowner facing foreclosure to keep
his home, start paying the future mortgage payments
on time, and repaying the back, unpaid mortgage
payments (called the "arrearage") over
the plan period. It can also help if the debtor
has a civil tax penalty. These penalties cannot
be discharged in a chapter 7 and must be paid in
full over the life of the plan in a chapter 13.
But in a chapter 13, usually the penalties and
interest stop which allows the taxpayer/debtor
to pay the debt much faster than outside of chapter
13.
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