I'm actually going to be filing Chapter 7, so I've never researched chapter 13. An acquaintance of mine was asking me about BK and I was telling him the basic differences between chapters 7 and 13. He then asked me a seemingly simple question, but I have no idea what the answer is. How does a chapter 13 plan deal with variable income?
The person in question just lost his job, can't find a new one, and is going to be trying to make his own consulting business succeed. He has good months and he has bad months. So how does chapter 13 deal with that?
It would appear that Chapter 13 is meant to deal with the guy who makes $5000 per month. Not the guy who makes $5k one month, $2k the next month, then $8k the month after. Those two situations have the exact same average income. But if he was stuck in a plan that required him to pay, e.g., $1k per month (after his $4k per month of expenses), that would be doable in the $5k month, extremely easy in the $8k month, and impossible in the $2k month. So what would they have him do?
The person in question just lost his job, can't find a new one, and is going to be trying to make his own consulting business succeed. He has good months and he has bad months. So how does chapter 13 deal with that?
It would appear that Chapter 13 is meant to deal with the guy who makes $5000 per month. Not the guy who makes $5k one month, $2k the next month, then $8k the month after. Those two situations have the exact same average income. But if he was stuck in a plan that required him to pay, e.g., $1k per month (after his $4k per month of expenses), that would be doable in the $5k month, extremely easy in the $8k month, and impossible in the $2k month. So what would they have him do?
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