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What Property Can I Keep And What Will I Lose In A Chapter 7 Filing?
The dollar amounts and the specific items that are exempt vary from state to state.
However, the following are some typical examples of property and amounts that
you can keep when filing Chapter 7. If you are married and both spouses are filing
together, the dollar amounts given below are doubled.
- A car, up to $1,200
- Clothes
- Household goods and furniture, up to $200 per item
- Appliances
- Your principal home
- Personal effects, up to $200 per item
- Jewelry, up to $500
- Professional tools, up to $750
- Income from social security, disability, public assistance, unemployment,
pension funds, life insurance, alimony or veteran's benefits
- Unpaid but earned wages
- Pensions
- Miscellaneous property, such as life insurance money from a relative's death,
etc.
What you can lose also keep depends on your state's law. However, the list below
illustrates typical items that you might expect to lose when filing Chapter 7.
- a second residence
- recreational vehicles
- a second car
- stamp, coin and other collections and heirlooms
- stocks and bond certificates
- cash on hand (unless it comes from unemployment insurance)
- deposits of money (e.g., bank accounts, CDs, escrow accounts, money market
accounts)
- property that you own but not have any physical possession (i.e., security
deposits)
- property that you unloaded a year before filing
- property you are entitled to receive at some future date (e.g., tax refunds,
vacation pay, wages)
- your part of marital estate.
If you or a loved one is in need of legal assistance, call Gonzalez & Garcia Toll Free at (800) 352-HURT or submit
an online questionnaire. The initial consultation is free of charge, and
if we agree to handle your case, we will work on a contingency fee basis, which
means we get paid for our services only if there is a monetary recovery of funds.
In many cases, a lawsuit must be filed before an applicable expiration date,
known as a statute of limitations. Please call right away to ensure that you
do not waive your right to possible compensation.
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