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Life After Bankruptcys
Filed under BankruptcyAug 5Bankruptcy is the last resort for any debtor wherein he/she legally declares the inability to pay back the debt owed. In most cases bankruptcy is initiated by the debtor or the organization. However creditors can also request bankruptcy in an effort to get back what they are owed. After filing bankruptcy you can choose the life you want to live – you can either re-build your finances or plummet deeper into the abyss.
Follow The Checklist below and You’re Going to Emerge Unscathed Even after Bankruptcy
• Restrict or if possible STOP using credit cards
• If required get a secured bankruptcy credit card an pay your dues regularly
• Wait for two years before availing mortgage or even bankruptcy car loan to get the best interest rates
• Get copies off your credit reports and ensure that your accounts are listed as discharged
Bankruptcy Loan – Getting a Loan after Bankruptcy
Availing small and easily repayable bankruptcy loan – be it bankruptcy home loan or even bankruptcy car loan, will help you not just deal with your financial obligations but it will also help you rebuild your credit rating. A small bankruptcy personal loan is the ideal solution to repair your credit status. However there are some facts about bankruptcy loans that you must be aware of.
Firstly, bankruptcy loans are recommended only for people who have declared themselves bankrupt and only after their case has been discharged, their creditors have been paid. You have to wait for at least 2 years for your bankruptcy home loan or bankruptcy car loan application to be approved without unnecessary delay. Generally lenders perceive bankrupts as threats and don’t particularly want to risk lending to a recently discharged bankrupt. If you have chosen Chapter 7 Bankruptcy you must wait for 2 years to apply for a loan and in case of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy you need to first pay the full amount to your creditors before applying for a loan.
Can You Get A Credit Card After Bankruptcy?
You owned a home and hardly ever defaulted on your monthly payments. Your credit report sparkled. But unfortunate health circumstances forced you out of your job and you had to file for bankruptcy…Today you are looking for bankruptcy credit card without being charged outrageous interest rates. So what are you’re choices? You can choose between secured credit card for bankruptcy and unsecured credit card after bankruptcy.
Secured bankruptcy credit card is secured by a savings account you establish with your creditor. This savings account works as collateral for your credit limit. If you default on your payment your creditor will take money from the savings account. If you’re looking for a risk free credit card after bankruptcy – unsecured bankruptcy credit card is the option for you as it does not require any collateral.
Many people think about filing bankruptcy but the fear of life after bankruptcy hold them back. The information offered in this article aims to enlighten you on what you can expect when you have filed for bankruptcy.
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7 Steps to a Fresh Start After Bankruptcy
Filed under BankruptcyJan 10Bankruptcy is one option to consider in order giving yourself a “fresh start,” when you have more debts than you have assets. There are in fact many types of bankruptcy provided under the law but the most common is Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which is also known as liquidation.
When filing under Chapter 7 bankruptcy, all your assets, excluding those that are exempt under the law of your state, are dissolved and liquidated. Generally, the person tasked to do this is the court-appointed official, called a trustee.
All in all, the vital task of the trustee is selling your properties and using the proceeds to pay your creditors. After doing such, the court will then cancel many of your remaining debts, thus affording you a “fresh start” to life.
Here is a step-by-step guide to filing a bankruptcy under Chapter 7 bankruptcy:
Step 1: Decide whether you should file bankruptcy or not.
Filing bankruptcy is a personal decision, influenced by many factors, such as the amount of serious debts and your ability to meet the original payments or pay the full amount. For starters, when you are broke, it is never a nice experience getting harassed by creditors for debts incurred. For another, your decision to file should not be made for the sole purpose of putting a stop to your demanding creditors.
This is a significant point as secured creditors may apply for “relief from stay,” thus allowing them to continue their efforts to repossess or foreclose even though you already filed for bankruptcy.
Step 2: Get an attorney
While the law on Chapter 7 bankruptcy does not need individual consumers to hire an attorney who would represent them in court, it is still advisable to ask for legal help, particularly concerning critical decisions involved in bankruptcy.
Step 3: Comply with the legal requirements.
File your petition with the bankruptcy court serving in your area. If you are a business debtor, then file with the bankruptcy court in the place where the business was organized or has its principal place of business or principal assets. Your attorney should be able to advise you on how to deal with these required legal forms.
Step 4: Pay the necessary fees.
As with any other court cases, there are certain fees required, such as:
• Case filing fee
• Miscellaneous administrative fee
• Trustee surcharge
Upon filing, you are usually asked to pay these fees to the clerk of court.
Note that the number of installments is limited only to four. Additionally to that, you are also required to make the final installment no later than 120 days after filing the petition.
Step 5: Notice to the creditors and meeting.
After filing your petition for bankruptcy under Chapter 7, paying the necessary fees, and complying with the legal requirements, an “automatic stay” is granted to you by operation of law. This stay will efficiently stop most collection actions against you and your properties. This means that as long as the stay is in effect, creditors cannot initiate or continue lawsuits, wage garnishments, or even telephone calls demanding payments.
After the bankruptcy case has been filed, the bankruptcy clerk will give notice to all creditors whose names and addresses you provided. Then, the case trustee will hold a meeting of creditors between 20 and 40 days after you filed your petition.
Step 6: Cooperate with the trustee.
The case trustee has a vital role in a bankruptcy case. His primary responsibility is to liquidate your nonexempt assets in a manner that maximizes the return to your unsecured creditors. He does this by selling your property, if it is free and clear of liens and as long as it is not exempt, or if it worth more than any security interest or lien attached to the property and any exemption that the debtor holds in the property.
In view of the broadness of a trustee’s power, it is significant therefore that you cooperate with the trustee. Provide any financial records or documents that the trustee requests and answer questions, which the trustee is necessary to ask at the meeting of creditors under the Bankruptcy Code.
Step 7: After the discharge…
If all goes well with your Chapter 7 bankruptcy case – that is, no one files a complaint objecting to the discharge or a motion to extend the time to object – the bankruptcy court will issue a discharge order relatively early in the case, about 60 to 90 days after the date first set for the meeting of creditors
A discharge order is an order issued by the bankruptcy court, releasing you from personal liability for most debts and preventing your creditors from taking any collection actions against you. As a rule, excluding cases that are dismissed or converted, individual debtors receive a discharge in more than 99 percent of Chapter 7 bankruptcy cases.
For someone filing under Chapter 7 bankruptcy, a discharge of almost all of your debts is the ultimate goal. With the release of all your debts and creditors stopped from pursuing any further collection actions against you, the opportunity for a fresh start is apparent.
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Sep 21
The American Cancer Society estimates doctors will diagnose over 1.4 million new cases of cancer in the U.S. in 2007, with more than 559,650 cancer-related deaths. If you are among the majority of cancer patients and survive for at least five years following your diagnosis, you may face another fight: buying life insurance.
Buying life insurance for cancer patients is challenging, but not necessarily impossible. Your chances for securing a policy depend greatly on the type, stage and grade of the cancer, and even on the treatment plan. There is a relationship between the rate you’ll receive and the curability of your cancer. Certain types of skin cancer, for example, are considered very low risk by life insurance companies and a skin cancer history may not even impact premiums.
Applicants with common and treatable forms of breast and prostate cancer may be able to get a “standard” rating under ideal circumstances. But patients with a history of leukemia or colon cancer may fall into a “substandard” or “high substandard” rating at best, or receive declines. Anyone with cancer that has metastasized likely won’t be able to obtain a policy.
Dr. Charles Levy, senior vice president and chief medical director of AIG American General Domestic Life Insurance Cos., says, “We’re better and better able to differentiate the risks of individual cancers.” Life insurers like AIG American General have sophisticated tables to determine premiums, where they can factor in cancer types and treatments. The end result is better premiums because applicants aren’t lumped together as an “average.”
Most insurers will not offer a policy to someone who is still undergoing treatment for cancer. Depending on your type of cancer, the life insurer may also want to add a surcharge, also called a temporary flat extra. For example, AIG American General sometimes charges temporary flat extras for two to five years, depending on the applicant’s cancer and treatment. The good news is that although these extra premiums can be expensive, they will automatically disappear after a set period of time.
Cancer insurance risk specialists
While a dedicated life insurance agent will search cancer insurance companies to find insurers that will sell you a life insurance policy, in some cases you may be better off seeking out a broker who specializes in finding life insurance for people who have a history of cancer.
These brokers will know the specific questions underwriters will want answered when considering your application. Many brokers have developed relationships with several insurers, so they know which companies offer the best-priced life insurance policies for cancer survivors. Some brokers have experts who specialize in gathering your medical records and organizing them.
By directing your application to life insurers that will view your application most favorably, these brokers will help you find the most accurate price quotes and the lowest premiums for life insurance. Always check the financial strength of the insurer before you buy any policy and be sure that the agent or broker you choose is licensed in your state.
Life insurance strategies for cancer survivors
If you are a healthy cancer survivor, life insurance is even more feasible. There are things you can do to ensure you’re getting the best premium offers possible for your situation.
1. Gather all possible medical records before you apply, from the first pathology report to medical records to treatment records. That ensures medical underwriters have the most complete picture of you, your health, and your cancer history. Having all those records before you apply for cancer insurance will reduce delays in your application process, because your life insurer is going to request them and will wait for them. The information you provide can garner you better premiums in the end: The less life insurer underwriters knows about you, the more likely they are to have to assume you are the highest risk and offer you high premiums accordingly. According to Levy, “If it’s fuzzy, we’re more likely to err on the side of conservatism.”
2. Make sure you have complied with your doctor’s treatment plans. For example, says Levy, if your doctor asked to see you back in one year and you haven’t been back in four years, get to your doctor for your check-up before you apply for life insurance. Your life insurer is not going to offer you a policy without before seeing the results of that check-up. Similarly, if you’ve had breast cancer and you’re due for a mammogram in December and you apply for cancer insurance in October, your life insurer will likely wait for the results of your next mammogram.
3. Get prices from several companies. Policy costs can vary a great deal among companies.
4. See if you can get group life insurance through a professional, fraternal, membership, or political organization to which you belong.
5. Consider a “graded” policy (one with limited benefits) if you cannot get full death benefits. In the first few years of a graded policy, the company pays only the premiums and part of the face value if the insured person dies of a condition, such as cancer, that existed before the policy took effect. If the insured person dies after the specified grading-in period, the company will pay the full face amount of the policy.
If your cancer has been successfully treated, and you are otherwise in good health, you can likely obtain a cancer life insurance policy. If you can show that you are healthy and your treatments have gone well, several insurers may compete for your business.
