Bankruptcy Glossary -- Phoenix Terms Explained

Bankruptcy has its own language. This glossary explains the terms you will encounter when filing in the District of Arizona, written in plain English for Phoenix residents.

This page provides general educational information, not legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for advice about your specific situation.

Core Bankruptcy Terms

Automatic Stay

A federal court order that takes effect the moment you file bankruptcy. It stops most creditor actions including wage garnishment, foreclosure, repossession, lawsuits, and collection calls. See automaticstay.org for a complete guide.

Discharge

The court order that permanently eliminates your obligation to pay certain debts. The discharge injunction (section 524) makes it illegal for creditors to ever try to collect discharged debts. This is the goal of most bankruptcy filings.

Means Test

A calculation that determines whether you qualify for Chapter 7 based on your income and expenses. Arizona median income for one person is $56,381. If your income is below this, you pass automatically. See bankruptcymeanstest.org.

341 Meeting (Meeting of Creditors)

A required hearing where the bankruptcy trustee asks you questions about your finances under oath. Despite the name, creditors rarely attend. Held about 30-40 days after filing at the District of Arizona courthouse. See 341meeting.org.

Exemptions

Laws that protect certain property from being taken in bankruptcy. Arizona provides a $250,000 homestead exemption and protects $6,000 per vehicle ($12,000 if disabled). See our Phoenix exemptions guide.

Chapter-Specific Terms

Chapter 7 Terms

  • Liquidation: The trustee sells non-exempt assets to pay creditors (most Chapter 7 cases have no assets to sell)
  • No-asset case: When all your property is exempt and the trustee finds nothing to sell
  • Reaffirmation: A new agreement to keep paying a debt (often used for car loans)
  • Redemption: Paying the current value of collateral in a lump sum to keep it
  • Surrender: Giving up collateral (like a vehicle) and discharging the debt

Chapter 13 Terms

  • Repayment plan: Your 3-5 year payment schedule submitted to the court
  • Disposable income: What is left after allowed expenses -- this goes to creditors
  • Cramdown: Reducing a secured debt to the collateral's current value
  • Lien strip: Removing a junior lien (like a second mortgage) when the home is worth less than the first mortgage
  • Co-debtor stay: Protection for co-signers on consumer debts during your Chapter 13

Procedural Terms

Petition

The official document you file to start your bankruptcy case. For emergency filings, a bare-bones petition can be filed first with 14 days to complete the rest.

Schedules

Detailed forms listing your assets, liabilities, income, expenses, contracts, and financial history. These form the backbone of your bankruptcy case.

Statement of Financial Affairs (SOFA)

A questionnaire about your financial history including recent transactions, lawsuits, payments to creditors, gifts, and property transfers in the years before filing.

Proof of Claim

A form creditors file to assert their right to payment from the bankruptcy estate. Deadlines for filing claims are set by the court.

Trustee

The person appointed to administer your bankruptcy case. In Chapter 7, the trustee looks for non-exempt assets. In Chapter 13, the trustee collects plan payments and distributes them to creditors.

Discharge Injunction

The permanent court order under section 524 that bars creditors from ever collecting discharged debts. Violations can result in contempt of court.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13?

Chapter 7 eliminates most debts in 3-4 months through liquidation of non-exempt assets. Chapter 13 reorganizes debts into a 3-5 year repayment plan. Chapter 7 has income limits (means test); Chapter 13 has debt limits ($2,750,000).

What does discharged mean in bankruptcy?

A discharged debt is permanently eliminated. You are no longer legally obligated to pay it, and creditors cannot try to collect. The discharge injunction under section 524 makes collection attempts a violation of federal law.

What is the means test?

A formula comparing your income to the Arizona median ($56,381 for one person). If below the median, you qualify for Chapter 7. If above, allowed deductions may still bring you under the threshold. See bankruptcymeanstest.org.

What are exemptions?

Laws that protect your property in bankruptcy. Arizona provides a $250,000 homestead exemption and $6,000 per vehicle ($12,000 if disabled) vehicle exemption. See our Phoenix exemptions page.

What happens at the 341 meeting?

The trustee asks questions under oath about your assets, debts, income, and financial history. It typically lasts 5-10 minutes. Creditors may attend but rarely do. See 341meeting.org.

What does non-dischargeable mean?

Some debts survive bankruptcy and must still be paid. These include child support, alimony, most student loans, recent taxes, debts from fraud, and DUI judgments. See our debt types page.

Ready to Learn More?

How to File Discharge Screener

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