How hard is it to find an apartment or new home after a bankruptcy Chapter 7 closing? When looking should I mention the bankruptcy or just keep it quiet unless the landlord asks about it? Also, should I wait a year or more? I am currently staying and paying.
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Finding an apartment or house after bankruptcy Chapter 7
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Hi, we were discharged in March 2012 and moved into a rental unit the end of October 2012. We are in a small townhouse community (about 40 units total) and after the landlord verified our employment with our employers that was it. Not even a credit check, she said the employment verification was good enough. If she had wanted to run the credit report then we would have said something up front about the chapter 7 but it never came up.
We only looked at private landlord situations not big apartment complexes but I have heard that some of the big complexes will make you pay a larger deposit if bad credit or bankruptcy shows up in some cases. Stick with smaller situations and you might not have to deal with it. Good Luck!
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I wouldn't volunteer the information. If it's on an application then be honest about it, but otherwise it's pretty much a non issue. Recently I bought a new car and marked the bankruptcy option on the credit application and I don't think they even noticed. Of course this was the same dealership I bought from before and my credit score was just a few points below tier 1 so it may not have mattered to them.
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Unless there is no cost to apply for the rental, I suggest that you tell the property manager/leasing agent very bluntly that you filed for bankruptcy, and specifically ask if the previous bankruptcy is going to be a problem. If the answer is yes, then why waste money on the application fee? If you keep the BK a secret and apply, then you might be denied, and have wasted $60 or more on non-refundable fees.
I filed for BK this year, and I plan on getting a larger apartment next year. I will see if I can get an apartment at a different complex owned by the same company without having to pass a credit check again, since I have lived here now for 6+ years. If not, or if the asking rents are too high, then I plan to look at other apartment complexes, and of course I will ask upfront if the BK is going to be a problem, and if the answer is "yes" then I won't waste time or money applying.
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Originally posted by bcohen View PostI filed for BK this year, and I plan on getting a larger apartment next year. I will see if I can get an apartment at a different complex owned by the same company without having to pass a credit check again, since I have lived here now for 6+ years. If not, or if the asking rents are too high, then I plan to look at other apartment complexes, and of course I will ask upfront if the BK is going to be a problem, and if the answer is "yes" then I won't waste time or money applying.
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I am actually torn on how to answer this question.
If you are renting from an Individual, I would be honest and tell the potential landlord what your situation is and how it happened. Bring with you a work and payment history, and a recommendation from the former Landlord if any.
We have a tenant and her deadbeat live-in that we did not properly vet, before we allowed them on the property. We learned of them on Craig's List. I don't like them, and I don't want HIM here at all. But the woman is more acceptable.
If we ever do this again, I will demand a five-year work history (they are the laziest creatures, especially HIM) and I want a five year list of their domiciles. (They don't stay anywhere more than about 6 months, because no one else can stand HIS mouth. The last week of next month, will make it a year with us. *ARRGH!!* *damn* and *phooey*!!)Last edited by AngelinaCat; 09-14-2013, 04:52 PM."To go bravely forward is to invite a miracle."
"Worry is the darkroom where negatives are formed."
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