One common fear home owners have is foreclosure, especially in Georgia where foreclosures are so common. Next on the list is your car, likely how you get to work and/or school, and maybe how you drive your children to school. It’s obvious that a car can be just as important as your home: without it, you may be out of transportation options.
One fear car owners have is seeing a tow-truck pull up in their drive way – the feared repo-man. They take your car because you missed payments. What’s next? Before this happens, you can file either Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy. Chapter 13 is much better for keeping your car; you sometimes lose it in a Chapter 7 discharge.
For Georgia home owners, Chapter 7 may also be dangerous. You can lose both your home and car if you can’t make any payments. Though you do get time with the “automatic stay,” you may risk losing them.
With Chapter 13, Georgia home and car owners also get an automatic stay, which halts all collections. You do in fact continue to make payments in some forms, namely for your home and car, but with the debt repayment plan you can make it more manageable.
How can you keep your car?
The automatic stay does give you protection, but for your car you will still be making payments. In some cases, this is not possible, so it might be better to be completely free of the debt with Chapter 7. If you can come up with the money to make payments, you can keep the car. The payments will be much more affordable.
What if you lost it before bankruptcy?
Technically you can get your car back if it was recently repossessed. Say for example 3 weeks before you filed bankruptcy, your car was repossessed. As long as it was recent, and you can come up with enough money to make payments, you can keep the car. This is where an experienced Georgia bankruptcy lawyer can help.
What if you miss a Chapter 13 payment?
You can modify your payment plan or suspend it if you miss some payments or are incapable of continuing. Some believe that once you miss a payment, the deal is over. Not so, because you can work with your lawyer and Georgia bankruptcy court to get back on track.
How much does it cost?
A Chapter 13 bankruptcy will cost $274 to file with the Georgia courts. Hiring a good lawyer will cost you more, usually a flat rate or hourly rate. It’s definitely worth it once you see the advantages – saving your home, car, and other assets.
Who can help?
If you fear losing your car or perhaps more importantly your home because of missing payments, you need to act quickly. This is not to say rush into the process, but the earlier you get the Chapter 13 bankruptcy process started, the better. You need a good lawyer in all bankruptcy cases.






