The Ultimate Bankruptcy Guide: How to recover from Bankruptcy, rebuild your credit score and bounce back
The Ultimate Bankruptcy Guide: How to Recover from Bankruptcy, rebuild your credit score and Bounce back Today only, get this Amazon bestseller for just $2.99. Regularly priced at $4.99. Read on your PC, Mac, smart phone, tablet or Kindle device. If you are deciding if bankruptcy is right for...
show more
The Ultimate Bankruptcy Guide: How to Recover from Bankruptcy, rebuild your credit score and Bounce back
Today only, get this Amazon bestseller for just $2.99. Regularly priced at $4.99. Read on your PC, Mac, smart phone, tablet or Kindle device.
If you are deciding if bankruptcy is right for you, the first step is to learn about bankruptcy.
Do you need a fresh financial start? Are you being hounded by debt collectors? You are not alone. Almost 1.5 million individuals file personal bankruptcies every year in the U.S.
It has been a long-standing element of American law that an individual can file for bankruptcy and obtain a fresh start.
For individuals, there are two basic types of bankruptcies : chapter 7 and chapter 13.
An individual may file for bankruptcy under Chapter 7, which is sometimes called "fresh start" or a "liquidation" bankruptcy. In a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, an individual may keep certain kinds of property (called "exempt" property), and his or her remaining property will be sold to pay off his or her debts. When an individual is discharged from Chapter 7 bankruptcy, most of his or her preexisting debts will be discharged.
Most individual bankruptcies are chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. The process is relatively fast: cases are typically opened and closed in four to six months. LegalZoom offers affordable flat-fee pricing for chapter 7 bankruptcy filings.
People choose to file under chapter 7 for many different reasons. They may choose to do so because they have large payments that they cannot pay down like expensive hospital bills. Others may file during long periods of unemployment when they simply cannot pay their bills.
Filing for bankruptcy under Chapter 13 is different than doing so under chapter 7. Chapter 13 (sometimes called a "wage earner plan" allows an individual to pay his or her debts over an extended period using a court-approved, supervised, and enforced payment plan. Not all creditors are paid in full, and unpaid amounts will be discharged (with some exceptions).
Chapter 13 bankruptcy filers help create their own payment plans, which give them three to five years to pay personal debt from their disposable incomes (i.e., whatever is left after necessary expenses, like food and shelter, have been paid). In a chapter 13 bankruptcy, individuals are often allowed to keep their property.
A person's eligibility for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 is determined by his or her income, living expenses, and debts.
Here Is A Preview Of What You'll Learn...
Dispelling the myths about Bankruptcy
What To Avoid Doing Post bankruptcy
Setting Your expectations: Life After Bankruptcy
Rebuild your Credit Score, Rebuild your Life
Much, much more!
Download your copy today!
Take action today and download this book for a limited time discount of only $2.99!
Recover from bankruptcy and bounce back now!

Tags: bankruptcy guide; bankruptcy for dummies; bankruptcy recovery; bankruptcy of our nation; bankruptcy questions; bankruptcy bible; credit repair; credit card debt; credit repair secrets; bankruptcy; credit recovery; bankruptcy law
show less