Personal
bankruptcy also may be an option, although its consequences are
long-lasting and far-reaching. People who follow the bankruptcy rules
receive a discharge — a court order that says they don’t have to repay
certain debts. However, bankruptcy information (both the date of the
filing and the later date of discharge) stay on a credit report for 10
years and can make it difficult to get credit, buy a home, get life
insurance, or sometimes get a job. Still, bankruptcy is a legal
procedure that offers a fresh start for people who have gotten into
financial difficulty and can't satisfy their debts.
There
are two main types of personal bankruptcy: Chapter 13 and Chapter 7.
Each must be filed in federal bankruptcy court. Filing fees are several
hundred dollars. For more information visit the United States Courts. Attorney fees are extra and vary.
Chapter
13 allows people with a steady income to keep property, like a
mortgaged house or a car, that they might otherwise lose through the
bankruptcy process. In Chapter 13, the court approves a repayment plan
that allows you to use your future income to pay off your debts during
three to five years, rather than surrender any property. After you make
all the payments under the plan, you receive a discharge of your debts.
Chapter
7 is known as straight bankruptcy; it involves liquidating all assets
that are not exempt. Exempt property may include automobiles,
work-related tools, and basic household furnishings. Some of your
property may be sold by a court-appointed official, called a trustee, or
turned over to your creditors.
Both
types of bankruptcy may get rid of unsecured debts and stop
foreclosures, repossessions, garnishments and utility shut-offs, as well
as debt collection activities. Both also provide exemptions that let
you keep certain assets, although exemption amounts vary by state.
Personal bankruptcy usually does not erase child support, alimony,
fines, taxes, and some student loan obligations. And, unless you have an
acceptable plan to catch up on your debt under Chapter 13, bankruptcy
usually does not allow you to keep property when your creditor has an
unpaid mortgage or security lien on it.
You must get credit counseling
from a government-approved organization within six months before you
file for any bankruptcy relief. You can find a state-by-state list of
government-approved organizations at the U.S. Trustee Program,
the organization within the U.S. Department of Justice that supervises
bankruptcy cases and trustees. Also, before you file a Chapter 7
bankruptcy case, you must satisfy a "means test." This test requires you
to confirm that your income does not exceed a certain amount. The
amount varies by state and is publicized by the U.S. Trustee Program.
Debt Scams
Advance
Fee Loans: Some companies guarantee you a loan if you pay them a fee in
advance. The fee may range from $100 to several hundred dollars. Resist
the temptation to follow up on these advance-fee loan guarantees. They may be illegal.
It’s true that many legitimate creditors offer extensions of credit
through telemarketing and require an application or appraisal fee in
advance. But legitimate creditors never guarantee that you will get the
loan – or even represent that a loan is likely. Under the FTC’s
Telemarketing Sales Rule, a seller or telemarketer who guarantees or
represents a high likelihood of your getting a loan or some other
extension of credit may not ask for — or accept — payment until you get
the loan.
Credit Repair: Be suspicious of claims from so-called credit repair clinics.
Many companies appeal to people with poor credit histories, promising
to clean up their credit reports for a fee. But anything these companies
can do for you for a fee, you can do yourself — for free. You have the
right to correct inaccurate information in your file, but no one —
regardless of their claims — can remove accurate negative information
from your credit report. Only time and a conscientious effort to repay
your debts will improve your credit report. Federal — and some state —
laws ban these companies from charging you a fee until the services are
fully performed.
SURCE:
www.consumer.ftc.gov/