I've been reading through this section but it's all pretty daunting. Up until today my attorney thought I was a ch 7, but I got a balloon payment (five paychecks - I'm a teacher and we don't get paid over the summer) and it looks like that check will put me $3000 over a chapter 7. I'm really upset about having to do a 13, especially since the "snapshot" they're looking at doesn't represent my real income. But, if I do have to do a 13 and I'm that close to the edge is there an "average" monthly payment that I should start to wrap my brain around?
Here's our expense breakdown:
Family of 4
Take home pay: Apr $4,400 a month
2100 mortgage
1600 child care
750 student loans
1000 other expenses (gas, electricity, food, phone, etc.)
$44,000 credit card debt (950 a month in just min. payments)
So, on average we're between $1000 and $2000 behind every month.
(Sidenote: we can't/won't pull the kids from daycare because my husband is actively looking for work and this is the only place around us that works around my schedule, doesn't charge us in the summer -when I'm off from teaching - and most importantly, that we trust. Oh, and it's the cheapest around us for two kids.)
Here's our expense breakdown:
Family of 4
Take home pay: Apr $4,400 a month
2100 mortgage
1600 child care
750 student loans
1000 other expenses (gas, electricity, food, phone, etc.)
$44,000 credit card debt (950 a month in just min. payments)
So, on average we're between $1000 and $2000 behind every month.
(Sidenote: we can't/won't pull the kids from daycare because my husband is actively looking for work and this is the only place around us that works around my schedule, doesn't charge us in the summer -when I'm off from teaching - and most importantly, that we trust. Oh, and it's the cheapest around us for two kids.)
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