Posted by on July 21, 2015 under Bankruptcy Blog |
If you’re filing a Chapter 13 case, what choices do you have about your income tax refund?
Start with What Happens with Refunds in Chapter 7
To understand how tax refunds are treated under Chapter 13, it helps to compare how they are treated under Chapter 7. For more details about that, see my last blog. But to summarize, when you file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy usually you can keep your tax refund either by 1) smart timing of the bankruptcy filing, or 2) by the use of “exemptions.” If you wait to file your case until after you have received and appropriately spent the refund (carefully following the advice of your attorney on where to spend it), then this refund is not an “asset of your bankruptcy estate”—the bankruptcy trustee and your creditors have no claim on it. On the other hand, if the refund IS an “asset of your bankruptcy estate” but it is covered by an “exemption,” then the refund is protected and you get to keep it.
The Good News about Tax Refunds under Chapter 13
- As with Chapter 7, if you are flexible about when to file your case, wait until you have received and spent the refund appropriately.
- Better than Chapter 7, if you have to file your Chapter 13 case when your tax refund is still pending, you may be able to get permission to spend that refund—or part of it—for some urgent and necessary expense, instead of having it just go to pay creditors.
- Also better than Chapter 7, to the extent that you are required to pay all or part of the refund to the trustee, you would likely have some discretion about where that money would get paid, by including that in the terms of your Chapter 13 plan.
But This Comes with Some Not So Good News
- Chapter 7 focuses only on assets you own or have a right to when the case is filed. So it involves only the tax refunds that are pending at that point in time. Chapter 13 in contrast involves your income throughout the three to five years that your case is active. Since future tax refunds are considered part of your ongoing income, they need to be accounted for, and generally must be paid to the trustee to pay to your creditors.
Paying the Trustee Future Tax Refunds Is Usually Not So Bad
- Usually you can minimize the issue by reducing the payroll tax withholdings made by your employer, thereby reducing that tax year’s refund. As a result you are giving yourself more money each month for living expenses or for making your Chapter 13 plan payments.
- If you still do receive a relatively large refund during your case, and you have some out-of-the-ordinary urgent need for all or part of that money, you may be able to get trustee and/or court permission to use it for that purpose.
- Even to the extent that you still have refunds going to the Chapter 13 trustee during the years of your case, that money could well be doing some serious good work, such as:
- In many situations that additional money beyond your regular monthly plan payments allows you to complete your case faster, giving you an earlier fresh start.
- Important creditors would likely be paid more quickly—such as a child support arrearage or the payoff of a vehicle.
- The extra money from the refunds may be critical in allowing you to pay off the plan within the mandatory maximum 5-years, so that you can discharge all your remaining debts and have a successful Chapter 13 case.
Conclusion
As with Chapter 7, you can usually time the filing of your Chapter 13 case so that you can keep your current-year income tax refund(s). But if you can’t wait to file, then under Chapter 13 you tend to have more control over what happens with the pending tax refund(s). You do have the disadvantage of losing some control over the next few years of tax refunds, but that is less of a practical problem than it may seem for the reasons just outlined.
Posted by on June 23, 2015 under Bankruptcy Blog |
If you’re filing a “straight bankruptcy” case, how do you keep your income tax refund?
Keeping tax refunds is all about timing. You can generally keep your refund but absolutely have to play it right, following rules that at first may not make sense. It is all too easy to mess this up, so you truly should have your attorney guide you through it, applying your unique circumstances to your local laws and practices. But here are the general principles at play.
Let’s start with some background to make sense of this:
- From the bankruptcy system’s perspective, a Chapter 7 case focuses on assets—determining whether you get to keep everything you own or not. That’s why it’s called the “liquidation” chapter. Most of the time you do get to keep everything, but sometimes some of it gets “liquated”—taken from you and turned by your bankruptcy trustee into cash, which then gets paid to your creditors.
- So where does your tax refund fit into this—is it is an asset that your trustee can take from you? That mostly depends on your timing.
- Everything you own or have a right to at the moment your Chapter 7 bankruptcy case is filed becomes your “bankruptcy estate.”
- That “estate” includes both your tangible assets and also intangible ones. One kind of intangible asset is a debt owed to you. A tax refund can be such an intangible asset of your “bankruptcy estate.”
The timing of the filing of your Chapter 7 case determines whether a tax refund is part of your “bankruptcy estate” and therefore could potentially be taken from you:
- An income tax refund is considered your asset as of the time of the last payroll withholding of the year being considered (so for this calendar (2015), the last withholding would be from your last paycheck in December and your employer would forward that money to the taxing authority in the beginning of January, 2016). That’s because as of that time, the full amount of that refund has accrued. Even though until you prepare your tax returns nobody knows the amount of your refund—or even whether you will be receiving one at all—for bankruptcy purposes, the anticipated tax refund is legally all yours as of the very beginning of the next year. And what’s yours is part of your “bankruptcy estate.”
- So IF you file after the beginning of the year but before receiving and appropriately spending the refund, that refund is part of your “bankruptcy estate” and is at least at risk of being taken from you. Again, this is true even if you have no idea how much that refund will be, or even whether you are entitled to one.
- BUT, if you DO receive and appropriately spend the refund before your Chapter 7 case is filed, then the refund is gone and is no longer your asset, and so is no longer part of your “bankruptcy estate.” Your trustee has no claim to it.
Even if your tax refund IS part of your “bankruptcy estate,” it will not be taken from you if it is exempt:
- Although theoretically it’s safest to file your Chapter 7 case when your tax refund is not part of your “estate”—such as after you receive and appropriately spend it beforehand, sometimes you don’t have that much flexibility about when you file your bankruptcy. Then especially it’s critical to get good legal advice about whether that refund will be exempt based on the local law applicable to the case.
- Usually, you get to keep most or all of your “estate” because it’s “exempt”—protected. In the same way, tax refunds are often exempt, depending on the amount of the refund and the exemption that’s applicable to it.
- Some states have specific exemptions applicable to certain parts of the tax refund, or laws that exclude them from the bankruptcy estate altogether, particularly for the Child Tax Credit or the Earned Income Tax Credit.
Even if a tax refund, or some portion of it, is not exempt, sometimes the Chapter 7 trustee may still NOT want it:
- The trustee may decide that the amount the “estate” would get—the refund by itself or in conjunction with any other non-exempt asset(s)—is not enough in value to justify creating an “asset case.” The amount of refund to be collected may be too small to justify the administrative cost involved to collect and distribute it. You might hear the trustee say that the amount of the refund is “insufficient for a meaningful distribution to the creditors.”
- What that “insufficient” amount is differs from one court to another, and often even from one trustee to another, so this is another specific area where you need the guidance of an experienced attorney.
- Caution: if the trustee is already collecting any other assets as part of the “estate,” then most likely he or she will want every dollar of your tax refunds that are not exempt.