In Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, What’s The Plan?
It helps to have a plan. In life. In business. In relationships. Plans are good things. So to, in Chapter 13 bankruptcy, having a plan is not only a good idea, it’s the law!
As an Orlando bankruptcy lawyer, I help my clients formulate a Chapter 13 payment plan to accomplish their financial goals. Depending on my client’s situation, through their payment plan, which can usually last anywhere from 36 to 60 months, I can help them catch up a mortgage payment, eliminate a second mortgage altogether, wipe out credit card debt, save money on a car loan, or handle IRS debt.
The Debtor, the person filing the Chapter 13 bankruptcy, has to file a payment plan at the outset of the case. The plan’s job is to tell everyone what goals the Debtor wants to achieve during the time the Debtor is in bankruptcy. The plan also instructs creditors how they will be dealt with, and tells the Chapter 13 Trustee who to pay and how much to pay each creditor.
The Debtor has several options to choose from when creating a chapter 13 plan. Too often in Court I see folks try to develop a plan with no idea how to express what they want to do in the plan in a way that can be understood by anyone. The result is that the plan gets objected to, or the Debtor’s case gets dismissed by the Trustee. This is bad because then the Debtor has filed bankruptcy and got nothing from it.
Hiring an experienced Orlando bankruptcy lawyer is a greta first step to getting the result you want in your Chapter 13 case. Most of the time in my cases, when my clients make their Trustee payments, they never even have to go to the Bankruptcy Court at all during their case. The most important thing, though, is that my clients succeed in meeting the financial goals they set at the beginning of their case.
In Chapter 13 cases, it’s all about having a plan. A plan that gets you through the Chapter 13 process and wipes out your debt is even better.
Learn more about Chapter 13 bankruptcy. Stop by K. Hunter Goff’s site where you can find an experienced Orlando bankruptcy lawyer and learn how he can help you.
September 4, 2010
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Posted by K. Hunter Goff








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