How will Bankruptcy Affect my Credit?
In general, bankruptcy might slightly affect a person’s credit score. However, most of the time, it will not cause extreme damage to a debtor’s credit score. Of course, this depends on a number of...
In general, bankruptcy might slightly affect a person’s credit score. However, most of the time, it will not cause extreme damage to a debtor’s credit score. Of course, this depends on a number of...
Yes. Filing for bankruptcy and receiving a “discharge” of your debt removes the majority of your debt forever. The discharge is a Federal Court Order and if the creditor reports a discharged debt on...
No. This not true. Bankruptcy allows you to get rid of certain debts without ever having to pay for them. This means only creditors and people you tell will ever know you filed for...
No, you will not lose everything you have. In fact, most people who file for bankruptcy will not lose anything. In most states, there are exemptions that safeguard houses, cars, household furnishings, wages, retirement...
Yes. There are no restrictions or laws that state you are not allowed to purchase homes, household goods, furnishings, or cars one you receive your discharge in bankruptcy.
Research shows you will be more likely to get credit after you have filed bankruptcy than if you do not file at all. This is because bankruptcy removes the debts you cannot afford to...
This is a common misconception. In most cases, bankruptcy is reported on your credit report for 10 years. However, because something is reported on your credit report does not mean it will have a...