Credit History, Budgets, And Rebuilding After Bankruptcy

You filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy and discharged debts. Or you filed Chapter 13 bankruptcy with the intention of saving your home and assets from foreclosure. Of course, there are many ways to look at these steps, both positive and negative. Your credit history will suffer. You will have trouble getting loans. However, you can rebuild your credit report, get a secured credit card to do so, budget so you can later get loans, and quite often start fresh. This blog guide shows you how.

Reasons to File Chapter 7

The most common reasons to file Chapter 7 bankruptcy are because of credit card and medical debt. Filing can discharge thousands if not tens of thousands of monies owed which you simply cannot afford. Chapter 7 helps give you a fresh start in a matter of months.

Reasons to File Chapter 13
Chapter 13 bankruptcy is very different than Chapter 7, and less common. However, by filing you can maintain your major assets, such as home and car. If you have debts which cannot be discharged in Chapter 7, you can pay on them in manageable amounts with Chapter 13.

Rebuilding Credit History
One of the best ways to rebuild your credit after bankruptcy is by getting a secured credit card. This can prove to creditors that you can maintain credit. It will also improve your credit just like paying on a regular credit card. How do secured credit cards work? You can choose the amount you want the credit to be, and pay it directly to the bank in order to get it. If you paid $1,000, you’d get a $1,000 credit line. This may sound pointless, but you get to keep the money, and then use the card and pay on it as you would a normal credit card.

Budget After Bankruptcy
If you want to avoid filing bankruptcy again, it’s time to start budgeting. This means looking over both income and expenses. If you’ve been spending more than you’re making, for example, you can see clearly where you need to tighten up. You may opt to buy the lower priced car, less items you really don’t need, eat out less, and only charge with a secured credit card with the goal of buying once your credit is better.

Save Money
You should also look for other ways to save money. A penny saved is a penny earned, and though that’s a cliché it’s true. The best way to stop a future bankruptcy is to keep money in your account, not spending it all your paycheck. Many file Chapter 7 bankruptcy because of a loss of job. If you prepare for losing a job by keeping several months to half a year in income saved, you can avoid future trouble. Yes, saving six months of salary may seem impossible, but it’s the best safety net you have. And it’s a goal worth having.

Life After
This may all sound like leading a money-tight life. You can’t buy items beyond your means, you only use money you have, you budget, you save months in salary, and so on. However, if you look to the reasons you had to file bankruptcy, you can make plans to avoid it ever happening again. And there’s good news: you can soon enough buy the more expensive car, the better home, the more expensive entertainment items. These are good goals to have.




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