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Chapter 13 Gives the Most Time to Cure Your Mortgage

 Posted on July 29, 2019 in Mortgage

Chapter 7 provides no mechanism to cure your mortgage. But Chapter 13 does provide a powerful, realistic, and practical way to do so.

Chapter 7 “Straight Bankruptcy” and Chapter 13 “Adjustment of Debts”

Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 are the two main consumer bankruptcy options.

Most Chapter 7 cases only takes a few months—usually 3 to 4 months—from filing to completion. A Chapter 13 case usually takes 3 to 5 years. At first this extra length of time may seem like a disadvantage. However Chapter 13 puts this time to good use, accomplishing things that you can’t under Chapter 7.

Essentially, Chapter 13 gives you the 3-to-5-year period to cure your mortgage, while protecting your home throughout that time.

The Chapter 7 Shortcomings

Chapter 7 leaves you at the mercy of your mortgage lender if you’re behind on the mortgage.

Chapter 7 protects you from the lender for only the 4 months or so that it lasts. (The protection might even be shorter if the lender asks the bankruptcy court for permission to end the protection sooner.) During that time you may be able to work out a “forbearance agreement” with your lender. This agreement nails down the terms for curing your mortgage.

The problem is that you have precious little leverage in this negotiation. If you are not too far behind on your mortgage, your lender may be give you a few months, maybe up to a year, to catch up. But the lender has all the leverage and you have almost none. It could just begin or resume a foreclosure as soon as your Chapter 7 case is over. With that leverage it can make you try to catch up unrealistically fast, requiring huge extra catch-up payments each month. This makes more likely that you won’t succeed in always making the required payments. And at best, if you do make those large payments and do catch up, it’ll be a tough and risky experience.

The Chapter 13 Solution

In contrast, as mentioned above Chapter 13 gives you much more time, and protects your home in the meantime.

Instead of the catch-up payment amount being imposed on you, your personal realistic budget determines the amount. The payments can be stretched out over as much as 5 years. You may even be able to delay or lessen these catch-up payments if you have other even more urgent debts to pay. Also, if your circumstances change midstream, you’d likely be able to adjust the payments.

These and other advantages effectively lower the catch-up payments, making more likely that you’ll successfully cure the mortgage and keep your home.

Doing Your Part

You can rather easily lose the multi-year protection of Chapter 13 if you don’t fulfill some important obligations. To maintain the protection you have to:

1. Keep current on your court-approved Chapter 13 payment plan. Your catch-up payments are incorporated into the single monthly payment you make towards virtually all your debts. Not paying this to the Chapter 13 trustee each month gives your mortgage lender cause to ask permission to foreclose. It also gives cause for your case to be thrown out altogether.

2. Keep current on the regular monthly mortgage payments. Chapter 13 gives you the means to slowly cure your arrearage. Falling further behind in the middle of your case seriously jeopardizes your case.

3. Pay your homeowner’s insurance on time. Don’t let your insurance lapse. That really scares your mortgage lender (and should scare you, too). Your lender would likely “force-place” its own insurance (which protects it but not you). It would then make you pay the exorbitant cost of this insurance, putting you that much further behind. This is also an independent basis for it to ask permission to foreclose.

4. Pay the property taxes. Falling behind on property taxes also gives the mortgage holder a separate basis for asking the bankruptcy court for permission to foreclose. The budget you work out with your bankruptcy lawyer will include money for these taxes, to prevent this from happening.

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