I have around $100,000 of unsecured debt that i plan to file with a 100% repayment plan. If i do that, would the trustee's fees add on to that amount? I haven't consulted with a attorney yet. I understand most attorney's charge 2-3K to file a chapter 13. Am I looking at 100,000 + 10% trustee fees + attorney fees in my repayment plan?
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No debtor chooses to be in a 100 percent payback to unsecured creditors. If your disposable monthly income is large enough, you will be placed in that situation whether you want to be or not. In such a case, your attorney will tailor your Chapter 13 payment to assure that the trustee will receive the customary compensation, and also cover any other secured and priority debts there may be (which will include the attorney's fees if that has not been dealt with prior to filing).
In all other cases, the disposable monthly income determines the Chapter 13 payment, and the plan base is drawn down with priority and secured debts being paid first, then the trustee fees are taken, and the balance is distributed among unsecured creditors. What the unsecured creditors get in terms of percentage is irrelevant.
High-income individuals who can afford to maintain their debt loads may choose to file Chapter 13 just to get rid of the ridiculous interest that must be paid to maintain the debt. Maintaining large unsecured debt amounts is exactly the same as burning money in your fireplace. Besides, high-income earners are usually smart enough to avoid getting into such a situation.
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Originally posted by paulsk View PostSo someone with high income has nothing to gain from pursuing chapter 13.
Remember a Chapter 13 is a Plan of Reorganization of the Debtor. It is nothing more than a contract to bring yourself current and payoff certain debts. It does allow charging off of everything else, including wholly unsecured mortgages, old tax debt, and a host of other things. There is nothing else that gives you the guarantees of discharge (of liability) for debts than a Chapter 11/13.Chapter 7 (No Asset/Non-Consumer) Filed (Pro Se) 7/08 (converted from Chapter 13 - 2/10)
Status: (Auto) Discharged and Closed! 5/10
Visit My BKForum Blog: justbroke's Blog
Any advice provided is not legal advice, but simply the musings of a fellow bankrupt.
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High-income individuals who can afford to maintain their debt loads may choose to file Chapter 13 just to get rid of the ridiculous interest that must be paid to maintain the debt. Maintaining large unsecured debt amounts is exactly the same as burning money in your fireplace. Besides, high-income earners are usually smart enough to avoid getting into such a situation.Filed Chapter 13 - 07/20/12
Discharged 8/2/16
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Originally posted by paulsk View PostThanks for sharing, I plan to do a 100% payback.LadyInTheRed is in the black!
Filed Chap 13 April 2010. Discharged May 2015.
$143,000 in debt discharged for $36,500, including attorneys fees. Money well spent!
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Figuring out what the trustee fees will actually be can be tricky ( depending on district). In my case the trustee is taking a different amount out of each payment that I make. (anywhere from like 1% to 10%). From reading somewhere else on here I believe the reasoning for this is that the trustee is limited in how much total he can collect across all cases in a given time period, or something of that nature, so while the "normal" rate here is 10% sometimes it is less because he has maxed out what he can collect ( or at least that was my understanding from the threads I have read).
For reference my case is (I believe) going to end up being a 100% payback case (or at least close to 100% payback of "allowed claims" because my second mortgage lender didn't amend their claim to be unsecured after the house was foreclosed, otherwise would not have quite been a 100% case... closer to 70% payback). And as everyone else has said plenty of other benefits, I was paying far more than 10% interest on most of the claims (and so far (halfway in) my trustee fees have actually averaged under 4% even thou the "normal" for my district is 10%)
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