Posts tagged: bankruptcy

If I File Bankruptcy, Can I Keep My Credit Cards?

complete

Several years ago, my sister and her husband had to file for bankruptcy. I did not really know what all that meant back then, so I asked my mom. She told me that it was what happened when you can’t pay back the money you owe on credit cards or loans, and that they take away things that you have to pay for them. She also told me that it is very difficult to get a credit card after you file bankruptcy, but was it really true that you could not have any credit cards at all?

Now that I am older, I know a little bit more about the subject. When a person file for bankruptcy with existing credit cards that have an existing balance on them, you have to list it as a debt. After all, that’s what it is, because you owe money to the credit card companies. Because of this you cannot keep your credit cards.

However, if you have a credit card that does not have a current balance, you are allowed to keep it. Because you do not owe that company any money on the credit card, it does not have to be listed as a debt, therefore allowing you to retain your card for further use. But if the credit card company in which you are borrowing this money from find out that you have filed for bankruptcy, they may want to change the terms and conditions that the card comes with, like your credit limit on that card and the interest rate you are paying each month.

Still, the credit card company that gave you that card does have the right to cut off your credit line through that card if they ever find out that you filed for bankruptcy. It all depends on whether or not they are willing to keep you, but most credit card companies still want your business, even afterwards. Some credit card companies, however, will see you as irresponsible and take away the credit line you have through them, despite the fact that you do not have a current balance, just because of bankruptcy.

Getting new credit cards after bankruptcy is not really hard at all. One thing about bankrupt victims of debt is that they continue to get credit card offers, and perhaps even in more quantity than they were given to them before. Of course, the interest rates may very likely be higher than they normally are, and the offered limits might be lower, all because of your high risk of not paying off your debt.

To me, the whole point of getting out of debt by taking the path we call bankruptcy is to learn from our mistakes. We should not file bankruptcy with the goal in mind to just get more credit cards and get deep into debt again. The whole idea of it is to learn from our mistakes and trying not to repeat those mistakes.

How Soon After Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Can You Get a Credit Card?

complete

Chapter seven bankruptcy is the most common form of bankruptcy that is used in the world today. It is the type of bankruptcy that liquidates your business or assets to allow them to be used to pay the people that you owe money to that you cannot pay back yourself. This liquidation happens all too often in our atmosphere of misused credit today.

There are several small steps you can take to get back on your feet after bankruptcy. However, most of these methods take time, because it is impossible to be instantly qualified for credit and back on track right after you have claimed that you cannot pay off your debt. Having credit card companies, banks, and other lenders trust you with credit again is going to take some time.

Build Your Credit Score

The best thing you can do to qualify yourself for good credit, better interest rates, and descent credit limits again is to build your credit score. Unfortunately, the only way you can really do this is to use some form of credit, like credit cards. So at first it may be difficult to pay those high interest rates and have such low credit limits, but you must face the consequences of filing for chapter seven bankruptcy and pay the price until you are back on your feet. Once you have again established a good credit rating, you will have lower interest rates and higher limits because you have rebuilt your trust and lowered your risk of another bankruptcy.

Manage Your Credit Wisely

The fact that you had to file for chapter seven bankruptcy alone should be a lifelong lesson that will get you to be more careful about your spending habits and your payment abilities. Now that you are trying to move on, you should create a budget for yourself so that you know just how much you can spend on credit, how easily you will be able to make the monthly payments on that amount, and how many things you could go without so that you can gain a better credit score.

Getting Another Credit Card

Getting a credit card after you have filed for bankruptcy will not be difficult. You will still receive offers and qualify for several different kinds of cards. In fact, if it is used more wisely than it was prior to your bankruptcy, a credit card may be the very thing that gets you out of your slump.

Having a credit card and using it sparingly after bankruptcy will help to build your credit score and get you back to where you were. The way in which you could do this is by getting a card, only spending a small amount of money on it, and paying it off each month. Keeping your credit card account open and paying it off frequently will build your credit score more rapidly than it would if you just let your credit card debt stay at a plateau or continually increase.