Chapter 13 lets you keep your property and repay debts over 3-5 years. Phoenix residents need regular income and debts within federal limits to file in the District of Arizona.
To file Chapter 13 bankruptcy in the District of Arizona, you must meet these requirements:
If your income is below the Arizona median ($56,381 for one person), your repayment plan can be as short as 3 years (36 months). You have the option to propose a longer plan up to 5 years.
If your income exceeds the median, your plan must be 5 years (60 months). Your disposable income after allowed expenses goes to creditors through the plan. The means test determines your disposable income.
Your total debts -- secured and unsecured combined -- must be under $2,750,000 (current limit). There is no minimum debt requirement.
You need regular income, but it does not have to come from employment. Social Security, pension, disability, rental income, or support from a spouse or household member can all qualify.
If your income is below the Arizona median ($56,381 for one person), the plan can be 3 years. Above median, it must be 5 years. No plan can exceed 5 years.
Yes. You can file Chapter 13 after a Chapter 7 discharge, but you must wait 4 years from the Chapter 7 filing date to receive a Chapter 13 discharge. You can still use Chapter 13 for its repayment benefits even without a discharge (called a Chapter 20). Check timing with the 1328(f) screener.
You can modify the plan, convert to Chapter 7, or request a hardship discharge if you have paid most of your plan and the failure was due to circumstances beyond your control. The District of Arizona requires prompt notification.
Chapter 13 has a higher dismissal rate than Chapter 7 nationally. Many cases are dismissed for failure to make plan payments or file required documents. Staying current on payments is critical.