There are two kinds of bankruptcies available to individual debtors. Those are Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. Chapter 7 is a complete discharge of all nonsecured debts, and some secured ones, generally including everything except taxes and school loans. The debtor generally has to give up anything of value that can be sold to pay his or her debts, although in most cases a person’s home and their primary transportation are exempted. In a Chapter 13, nothing has to be given up, but the debts have to be paid in full. The court simply works out a repayment plan and instead of paying the money to your debtors, you pay it to the bankruptcy trustee who then distributes it to the creditors. There are advantages and disadvantages, as well as eligibility requirements, for both types of bankruptcy and the bankruptcy attorney can best advise you which option will work better in your particular situation.
Whether you choose credit counseling or bankruptcy, either one can help you eliminate debt and get back on your financial feet. Both can stop collections procedures and eliminate annoying and harassing phone calls from collectors. The bottom line is, you don’t have to continue suffering; there are ways to get out of the debt situation and begin again. The most important thing is, once you are out of debt, carefully manage your money so you don’t land back in the same situation again.
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