Hello, all. For those of you who recognize my name, it's because I already filed my own Chapter 7 (three years ago) and everything went flawlessly. I have reestablished credit and my score is climbing rapidly. Sadly, it's my wife's turn now. It's a long story, but some old things came up from her past (her ex recently dumped some divorce-related debt in his own Chapter 7), and now we are left to deal with the ****storm. However, my salary has increased to the point that we can no longer pass the Chapter 7 Means Test. Therefore, it's looking like a 13 will be the only option. We are, by the way, going to be hiring a lawyer for this (she just had a consult with my Chapter 7 attorney yesterday, in fact), but right now we are just trying to get a firm grasp on things and make sure we understand it. A couple things are really confusing me...
First... on Form 22C (the "Means Test"), I am calculating our income to be below the median. I have read the form very carefully and it instructs me to subtract my Marital Adjustment (taxes, my student loans and a car payment in my name) prior to comparing our income to the median. These deductions bring our total income below the median. Am I doing this correctly?
This leads to my second question. As a result of being below the median, I understand that we would use our budget (from Schedule J?), instead of using the standard IRS deductions via Form 22C, to compute our "disposable income." The problem with this is, I am coming up with a higher disposable income when I compute it this way because there is nowhere to deduct the child support my wife receives like there is on 22C. Is this correct? By falling below the median income, we wouldn't get to deduct child support payments whereas we could if above the median?
If that's truly the case, should I just not claim the Marital Adjustment to keep us above the median and and compute our disposable income on 22C instead?
First... on Form 22C (the "Means Test"), I am calculating our income to be below the median. I have read the form very carefully and it instructs me to subtract my Marital Adjustment (taxes, my student loans and a car payment in my name) prior to comparing our income to the median. These deductions bring our total income below the median. Am I doing this correctly?
This leads to my second question. As a result of being below the median, I understand that we would use our budget (from Schedule J?), instead of using the standard IRS deductions via Form 22C, to compute our "disposable income." The problem with this is, I am coming up with a higher disposable income when I compute it this way because there is nowhere to deduct the child support my wife receives like there is on 22C. Is this correct? By falling below the median income, we wouldn't get to deduct child support payments whereas we could if above the median?
If that's truly the case, should I just not claim the Marital Adjustment to keep us above the median and and compute our disposable income on 22C instead?
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