Bankruptcy Chapter 7 Laws
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Understand bankruptcy Chapter 7 forms before filing under new law changes and requirements.

Bankruptcy Chapter 7

Substantially all rights and benefits under preexisting bankruptcy Chapter 7 laws remain viable, so long as each debtor qualifies under the new means testing requirement. The body of bankruptcy Chapter 7 laws appears in under Title 11, beginning with Section 101, and also includes many global sections enacted throughout the title, as well as a substantial number of related laws appearing in other sections of the United states Code.

New changes to Tile 11 (the Bankruptcy Code) were primarily contained in the Abuse Prevention Act of 2005, and are subject to periodic amendment. The Code also contains numerous benefits and opportunities for anyone considering Chapter 7. Laws for discharge are virtually the same and are explained elsewhere, while the means testing and credit counseling requirements are the two most remarkable changes.

New Bankruptcy Chapter 7 Laws

Means testing is a relatively new requirement based upon income earned during the 180 days before filing. Total income, the ratio of disposable income to unsecured debt, and a maximum limit formula are included. Each person who files Chapter 7 must satisfy all three portions of the test. In general, anyone who earned total income equal to or above the median earnings within their state of residency cannot file Chapter 7. The two other test requirements are based on disposable income, times 60, which must be below 25% of total unsecured debts, and below either $10,000 or $6,000 (depending on total income).

As a condition of filing bankruptcy, Chapter 7 laws now include a mandatory condition of completing a course, during 180 days before filing a petition, in credit management, counseling assistance and budget analysis. The course must be documented by a certificate of completion prepared by one of the course providers that appears on the official list maintained by the clerk.


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