Bankruptcy Chapter 7 Exemptions

November 26th, 2008

Tip! The next step in filing for bankruptcy is to determine exactly what assets you have available to you. Your assets include your recurring income from your job, your home and major items of personal property that you might own (including such items as motor vehicles).

Chapter 7 is a ‘liquidation’ of nonexempt assets to pay debts. In an orderly, court-supervised procedure, a court appointed trustee liquidates the non-exempt assets of the debtor’s estate and makes distributions to creditors. In Chapter 7, the debtor selects property he/she is eligible to keep from either a list of state exemptions or exemptions provided in the Federal Bankruptcy Code. Although the debtor files a schedule C form for property claimed as exempt, the property is not exempt until the trustee files the property exemption report which actually divides the property as exempt or non-exempt.

Although state exemption laws are different from state to state, these states typically allow the debtor to keep these types of property: The debtor can exempt Up to $17,425 of equity in the home (homestead exemption). Some states have no homestead exemption; some allow debtors to protect all or most of the equity in their home. The debtor may be able to keep jewelry only worth up to $1,000, a vehicle with more than $2,400 of equity. The debtor is allowed to keep the cash value of Insurance policies. Pensions under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) are fully exempted in bankruptcy. Not only all public benefits, such as welfare, social security, and unemployment insurance but also tools used on job and at least 75% of wages are fully protected.

To get exemption the debtor must file the bankruptcy case in the state he/she lived in for the 730 days (2 years) before filing; or the state where he/she lived the majority of the 180 period preceding the 2-year period. Federal exemptions are retirement benefits (veteran’s benefits etc.), survivor’s benefits (judicial center director’s benefits, lighthouse worker’s benefits etc.), death disability benefits (injury compensations etc.) and miscellaneous (military group insurance etc.). One must note that federal exemptions are not available for all states.

Tip! Once you narrow down the list of attorneys you are considering, the next phase in considering bankruptcy is to obtain references in regard to each of these attorneys’ prior performance. References will provide you with specific information on how a particular lawyer handles his or her business and on how successful he or she has been in the pursuit of prior bankruptcy cases.

The Bankruptcy Code allows the debtor to keep certain exempt property; but a trustee will liquidate the debtor’s remaining assets.

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy provides detailed information about chapter 7 bankruptcy, chapter 7 bankruptcy law, filing chapter 7 bankruptcy, chapter 7 bankruptcy form and more. Chapter 7 Bankruptcy is the sister site of Roth IRA Contributions.


Tags: , , , , , , ,

Tags

Entry Filed under: Bankruptcy Alternatives


Calendar

September 2010
M T W T F S S
« Mar    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

Most Recent Posts