Should You Stop Foreclosure By Filing For Bankruptcy?

When you are about to lose your home, you don’t care about anything else. It consumes your every thought. The only way you will be able to relax is to get the foreclosure called off so you can go back to enjoying your home and your life. Well, as a last ditch effort there is a method available to stop foreclosure on your home.

As soon as you file, the foreclosure must be stayed and the bank cannot pursue any further collection action until the bankruptcy is dealt with. This allows you to come up with a plan to save your home by offering a modified schedule for paying your debts. The plan does not have to cover all of your unsecured debts, but it does have to get the approval of a bankruptcy judge before it can go into effect.

You can’t file for bankruptcy until after you have completed credit counseling. This requirement serves the purpose of making sure that bankruptcy is really the only way you will be able to pay off your debts. The credit counseling company will work with you try to come up with a way for you to repay your debts without bankruptcy. Their proposed plan must be submitted when you file.

Within fourteen days after you file for chapter thirteen, you must file your repayment plan. This is usually done at the same time as the original filing, but it can be done later if you are not quite ready yet, as long as it is on file with the court within fourteen days.

You will be required to attend a creditor’s meeting, and all of the companies and people you owe money will have a chance to ask you questions. The purpose of this meeting is to give your creditors a chance to object if they do not feel you will be paying as much as you possibly could under the proposed plan.

After the creditor’s meeting has been completed, your repayment plan will be reviewed by the court to make sure that it meets the requirements set forth in the bankruptcy code. It can take up to 45 days for approval, but you have to start making payments according to the terms of the agreement within 30 days.

If you are able to stick to the repayment plan, chapter thirteen bankruptcy can stop foreclosure and save your home. However, if you default on the agreement, the court can convert your case to a chapter seven bankruptcy and sell off your assets to pay your debts. Because of the pros and cons involved with this plan, it is important to discuss this option with an experienced loan modification attorney before filing bankruptcy.

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Call Janian & Associates for a free consultation with a Loan Modification Attorney.

Related posts:

  1. Can You Stop Foreclosure With Bankruptcy?
  2. How You Can Stop Foreclosure Right Now
  3. Should I Consider Chapter 13 Or Chapter 7 Bankruptcy?
  4. Understanding Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
  5. How To Deal With Bankruptcy – You Need To Know The Laws And How This Will Affect You For Years
  6. How To Get Help Before Foreclosure
  7. How To Claim Bankruptcy Post 2005
  8. What Bankruptcy Is All About And What You Should Never Do If You Are Filing Part One
  9. Chapter Seven Bankruptcy Laws Post 2005
  10. Your 2nd Mortgage May Be Eliminated In A Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Filing

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