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You count the expenses from mortgage an utilities even if not current, and even if surrendering. The legal reason is that the "6-month lookback" is, by law, a "snapshot" of your history.
There ARE, though, some districts that view it otherwise. Those districts only allow you to use the federal accepted guidelines.
You need to find out what your district does, to find the correct answer. If you are in a district that will not allow you to claim the expenses on a property you are surrendering, you could be forced into a 13 or dismissed under the "totality" clause.
Not familiar with MI, but hopefully someone will answer.
I stopped paying my mortgage in July, filed in September (Michigan -Eastern District), intend to surrender my house, and my mortgage expenses were included. My expenses were slightly less than federal standards (I'm not sure how cases are handled if expenses greatly exceed these).
*Filed: September 23, 2009 *341: November 4, 2009 *Discharged: January 4, 2010 *Closed: January 20, 2010
I stopped paying my mortgage in July, filed in September (Michigan -Eastern District), intend to surrender my house, and my mortgage expenses were included. My expenses were slightly less than federal standards (I'm not sure how cases are handled if expenses greatly exceed these).
Thanks HakunaMatata. I am in Michigan -Eastern District also.
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