Keeping Your Wheels in Bankruptcy
Under Chapter 7, you can pay your vehicle loan mostly by getting rid of all or most of your other debts. Under Chapter 13, you can pay your vehicle loan ahead of most of your other creditors.
Bankruptcy law is about balancing the rights of debtors and creditors. When you file bankruptcy you gain some leverage against most of your creditors. But exactly how much leverage depends on the kind of debt. With a vehicle loan, you get much less leverage than with some other types of debts because the lender has a right to its collateral–your car or truck. But if you want to keep your vehicle (and you need a vehicle in Northern New Jersey), you may be able to use the lender’s rights over your collateral to your advantage.
Let’s see how this works under Chapter 7 and then under Chapter 13.
Favoring your vehicle loan in a Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy”
Between you and the vehicle lender, your leverage is that you have the right to simply surrender your vehicle to the creditor and pay nothing. The bankruptcy discharges (writes off) any remaining debt. Usually the lender does not get paid enough from selling the vehicle to cover the full balance on the debt.
This means that sometimes we can use the threat of surrender to improve the vehicle loan’s terms, maybe even reduce the balance to an amount closer to the current fair market value of the vehicle.
But unfortunately, many major vehicle lenders don’t see it that way. They made a decision at some point that they make more money by requiring all their Chapter 7 customers to pay the full balance on the vehicle loans, and then take losses on those who aren’t willing to do that and instead surrender their vehicles. But it may be worth a try.
Favoring your vehicle loan in a Chapter 13 “payment plan”
Between you and the vehicle lender, your leverage is both lesser and greater under Chapter 13 than under Chapter 7.
You have less leverage in threatening surrender if your Chapter 13 plan is paying anything to your unsecured creditors. That’s because the vehicle lender would recoup from you at least some of its losses upon surrender, instead of none.
And if your vehicle loan is two and a half years old or less, if you want to keep the vehicle you must pay the full balance of the loan, regardless of the value of the vehicle compared to the loan balance.
But you have more leverage in two ways. With any vehicle loan, including those two and a half years old or less, you do not have to cure any arrearage, and can change the monthly payment, as long as the balance is paid in full by the end of the case.
And if the loan is more than two and a half years old, you can do a “cramdown”—reduce the amount you pay to the fair market value of the vehicle, plus whatever percentage you’re paying to the pool of unsecured debt, if any.
Clearly, Chapter 13 gives the debtor more leverage, if not more options, when it comes to a vehicle.
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