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Bankruptcy – Chapter 7 vs Chapter 13, Dischargeable Debts, and Consequences

Definition and Core Concept

This article defines Bankruptcy as a legal process allowing individuals or businesses unable to repay debts to obtain a fresh start through court-supervised asset liquidation or repayment plans. Core types for individuals in the US: (1) Chapter 7 (liquidation) – discharges most unsecured debts in exchange for surrendering non-exempt assets, (2) Chapter 13 (reorganization) – 3-5 year repayment plan retaining assets. The article addresses: objectives of bankruptcy; key concepts including discharge, automatic stay, exempt vs non-exempt property; core mechanisms such as means test, credit counseling, and trustee oversight; international comparisons and debated issues (stigma, credit impact, public policy); summary and emerging trends (medical debt bankruptcy, student loan discharge difficulty, small business chapter 11); and a Q&A section.

1. Specific Aims of This Article

This article describes bankruptcy without providing legal advice. Objectives commonly cited: halting creditor collection (automatic stay), eliminating dischargeable debts, and providing structured repayment.

2. Foundational Conceptual Explanations

Key terminology:

  • Automatic stay: Immediate court order stopping collection actions (calls, lawsuits, wage garnishment, foreclosure).
  • Discharge: Court order eliminating personal liability for certain debts (credit cards, medical bills, personal loans).
  • Exempt property: Assets debtor may keep (varies by state: homestead, vehicle, retirement accounts, household goods).
  • Means test (Chapter 7 eligibility): Compares income to state median. Below median → Chapter 7 eligible. Above median → may qualify if disposable income insufficient to fund Chapter 13 plan.

Chapter 7 vs Chapter 13:


FeatureChapter 7Chapter 13
Duration3-6 months3-5 years
Asset lossNon-exempt assets soldKeep all assets (pay non-exempt value through plan)
Debt dischargeMost unsecured debtsMost unsecured debts (plus some non-dischargeable after plan)
EligibilityMeans test, no prior discharge within 8 yearsRegular income, secured debt <1,395,875,unsecured<1,395,875,unsecured<465,275 (2025)
Credit impact10 years on report7 years on report

3. Core Mechanisms and In-Depth Elaboration

Debts not dischargeable (Chapter 7 & 13):

  • Most student loans (undue hardship required).
  • Recent taxes (less than 3 years).
  • Child support and alimony.
  • Court fines, restitution.

Chapter 13 plan payments:

  • Based on disposable income (income minus allowed expenses).
  • Priority debts paid first (taxes, support), secured debts (mortgage, car) brought current.
  • Unsecured creditors (credit cards) receive what remains (often partial).

4. International Comparisons and Debated Issues

Bankruptcy systems:

  • US: Chapter 7/13 (consumer), Chapter 11 (business).
  • UK: Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA) – similar to Chapter 13; Bankruptcy (liquidation) – similar to Chapter 7.
  • Canada: Consumer Proposal (similar to Chapter 13); Bankruptcy.

Debated issues:

  1. Credit impact: Chapter 7 remains 10 years, Chapter 13 for 7 years. Scores drop 100-200 points initially, may recover within 2-3 years with responsible credit use.
  2. Stigma vs fresh start: Bankruptcy rates ~0.2% of adults annually. Many eligible households do not file due to misinformation or shame.
  3. Medical debt: Leading cause of personal bankruptcy in US (studies show 60-70% cite medical reasons).

5. Summary and Future Trajectories

Summary: Chapter 7 liquidates non-exempt assets, discharges most unsecured debts quickly. Chapter 13 allows asset retention through 3-5 year repayment plan. Automatic stay stops collection. Discharge eliminates personal liability.

Emerging trends:

  • Medical debt bankruptcy (proposals to simplify).
  • Student loan bankruptcy reform (Biden administration guidance 2022).
  • Small business Chapter 11 (Subchapter V, streamlined).

6. Question-and-Answer Session

Q1: Will I lose my house or car in bankruptcy?
A: Chapter 7: if equity exceeds exemption (e.g., homestead exemption $30-600k depending on state), trustee may sell. Chapter 13: keep property, pay non-exempt equity through plan.

Q2: Can I keep credit cards after bankruptcy?
A: All cards must be closed. After discharge, you may apply for new cards (likely secured card first). Many qualify for unsecured cards within 1-2 years.

Q3: Does bankruptcy clear tax debt?
A: Income taxes dischargeable if: due at least 3 years ago, filed at least 2 years ago, assessed 240+ days ago, and no frauds.

https://www.uscourts.gov/services-forms/bankruptcy
https://www.uscourts.gov/means-testing
https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/bankruptcy