Chapter 7 Medical Debt Relief Chapter 7, which is also called “liquidation bankruptcy,” is the most popular type of personal bankruptcy, not only in California but across the United States. According to federal bankruptcy court statistics, there were 486,347 Chapter 7 filings in 2017, including more than 50,000 in California’s courts. Like debtors (people who file for bankruptcy) in Chapter 13, Chapter 7 debtors are required to meet a few federal bankruptcy requirements before filing a petition for bankruptcy. For example, it is mandatory to complete pre-bankruptcy credit counseling. Once credit counseling and other pre-bankruptcy requirements have been successfully completed, it is time for the debtor to file his or her bankruptcy paperwork with help from a Folsom Chapter 7 bankruptcy lawyer. This includes:
The petition for bankruptcy.
Supporting financial documents that outline debts, assets, income, and other financial details. If the court agrees to proceed after reviewing these documents, the court will randomly assign a trustee to the case. After examining your assets, the trustee may sell some of your property to your creditors (lenders to whom you owe money), which helps repay your debts. However, you can likely keep most or all of your property by strategically using bankruptcy exemptions, which our Sacramento Chapter 7 attorneys can help you evaluate carefully. Once your debts have been repaid to the greatest extent possible, and you have completed several additional procedural requirements, the bankruptcy court will grant you a discharge if there are no issues with your case. The discharge wipes out liability for your remaining “dischargeable debts,” which are debts that can be erased in bankruptcy. Medical debts are dischargeable in Chapter 7, which means they will be wiped out at the end of your case. During the Chapter 7, before you can receive your discharge, you may be required to pay off a portion of your medical debt. However, because medical debts are unsecured (not secured by collateral) and are not priority debts (such as child support or employee compensation), medical creditors typically receive a lower priority than many others in Chapter 7.
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