{"id":676,"date":"2018-05-08T21:59:46","date_gmt":"2018-05-08T21:59:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.karinalucidlaw.com\/?p=676"},"modified":"2021-02-18T21:55:46","modified_gmt":"2021-02-18T21:55:46","slug":"when-bankruptcy-is-the-best-option-in-new-jersey","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.karinalucidlaw.com\/when-bankruptcy-is-the-best-option-in-new-jersey\/","title":{"rendered":"When Bankruptcy Is the Best Option in New Jersey"},"content":{"rendered":"

Is bankruptcy the best option if you are unable to repay debts? Especially as you have other obligations such as retirement, food and shelter. With so many websites offering free financial tools, it can be hard to know whom to trust. At Lucid Law, we thoroughly research financial products and companies to find you the best option for your bankruptcy.<\/p>\n

Bankruptcy stops collection calls, lawsuits, and wage garnishments. It erases debt. And despite what you\u2019ve heard, bankruptcy may help your credit scores.<\/p>\n

Credit bureaus and scoring experts often say bankruptcy is the single worst thing you can do to your scores. Foreclosures, repossessions, charge-offs, collections \u2014 nothing else can drive your scores down as fast and far as a bankruptcy. Most people have credit already battered by the time they file for bankruptcy. And once they do, their scores typically rise, not fall.<\/p>\n

If the debt is erased \u2014 which is known in bankruptcy court as a \u201cdischarge\u201d \u2014 scores go up even more.<\/p>\n

\u00a0<\/strong>How much and how soon credit scores can rise<\/strong><\/h4>\n

Using data from Equifax credit bureau, researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia found that filers\u2019 Equifax credit scores plunged in the 18 months before filing bankruptcy. However, they rose steadily afterward.<\/p>\n

Among the findings:<\/strong><\/h4>\n

The average credit score for someone who filed Chapter 7 in 2010 was 538.2 on Equifax\u2019s 280 to 850 range. (Scores in the low 600s and below are generally considered poor.) By the time the filers\u2019 cases were discharged, usually within six months, their average score was 620.3.<\/p>\n

The other type of bankruptcy, Chapter 13, requires a three- to five-year repayment plan, which most people don\u2019t complete. (Half of Chapter 13s filed between 2007 and 2013 were dismissed, and an additional 12 percent were converted to Chapter 7s or other types of bankruptcy, according to an American Bankruptcy Institute<\/a> analysis of Justice Department figures.) Those who got a discharge, though, saw their scores rise from 535.2 to 610.8, according to the Philadelphia Fed researchers.<\/p>\n

A recent study by FICO<\/a>, the company that created the leading credit score, found much smaller gains. Median credit scores for people who filed for bankruptcy between October 2009 and October 2010 rose from the 550s before they filed to the 560s afterward. (Most FICO scores are on a scale of 300 to 850.)<\/p>\n

After two years, 28% of bankruptcy filers had scores of 620 and above. After four years, 48% had scores of 620 or above, and only 1% scored 700 or above.<\/p>\n

But the FICO study didn\u2019t distinguish between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. Nor did it distinguish between people who got a discharge and those who didn\u2019t. Those with undischarged debt could be skewing the results. In other words, people with completed bankruptcies could have seen bigger gains than what\u2019s reflected in the median figures.<\/p>\n

Saving your credit score is only one reason<\/strong><\/h4>\n

Credit scores aren\u2019t the only factor to consider, of course. Some of the others:<\/p>\n

An end to collection hell: Nosal\u2019s study found that once people fell seriously behind on their debt \u2014 with at least one account 120 days overdue, for example \u2014 their financial troubles tended to get worse. Balances in collections and the percentage of people with court judgments grew.<\/p>\n

By contrast, people who file for bankruptcy benefit from its automatic stay. The automatic stay halts almost all collection efforts, including lawsuits and wage garnishment. If the underlying debt is erased, the lawsuits and garnishment end<\/p>\n

Freedom from certain debts: Chapter 7 bankruptcy wipes out many kinds of debt, including:<\/strong><\/h4>\n