Chapter 13 is a repayment plan for individuals with a
regular source of income and some disposable income. Debtors choose
Chapter 13 when:
- They have debts that are not dischargeable
in a Chapter 7
- They are behind on car or house payments
- Their assets are not exempted
- They have a pending foreclosure
Chapter 13 bankruptcy protects the debtor from collection
efforts. While a debtor is in a Chapter 13, creditors have to stop lawsuits,
garnishments, repossessions and foreclosures.
A plan is worked out under which a debtor makes regular
monthly payments to his or her creditors. At the end of the plan, any
unpaid balances on dischargeable debts are discharged. The level of
repayment varies from 1% to 100% depending on the debtor's income, expenses
and type of debt.
For example, the plan may provide for the repayment of a $12,000 credit
card debt at 10% over a period of 60 months. That is, the debtor would
pay $20 per month (1200 ÷ 60) toward that debt. At the end of
the plan, the balance of $10,800 is discharged. (There are some dollar
limits for total unsecured
and secured debt.)
Under Chapter 13, the debtor is permitted to keep all of his or her
property. He or she makes regular payments to a Chapter 13 Trustee,
who then pays the creditors over the period of the plan. The plan usually
runs for a term of three to five years.
An important and frequent use of Chapter 13 is to stop a home foreclosure
and repossession. Often a mortgage company says to a debtor "Pay
all the months you have missed or we will foreclose on (take) your home."
Chapter 13 allows a debtor to, in effect, say: "I will restart
my mortgage payment and pay you the arrears
(the missed payments) in small payments over a period of three to five
years." If a foreclosure has been filed, it will be stopped by
the filing of the Chapter 13.
We are a debt relief agency we help people file Bankruptcy Petitions to obtain relief under the Bankruptcy code.
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