Student Loans, Bankruptcy and Hardship Provision

Student Loans, Bankruptcy and Hardship ProvisionStudent Loans, Bankruptcy and Hardship Provision

Help! I am not able to pay back my student loans. I continue to apply for Repayment Assistance but I have been unable to start paying back my loans for over five years now. Do I have to wait two more years to declare bankruptcy? Will my student loan be included in the bankruptcy at that time?

Student loans are not usually included in your bankruptcy until seven years after full time studies and the end date is determined by your academic institution. However, after five years of full time studies and extreme hardship you may declare bankruptcy and apply for a “Hardship Provision”. If the courts accept your application, your bankruptcy will include your student loans after five years instead of seven.

In order to decide, the courts will look at various factors:

1. How did you use your student loan?

2. What efforts did you make to graduate from the program your student loan funded?

3. What efforts did you make over the years to repay your loan?  Such as applying for Repayment Assistance Plan

Contact Rumanek & Company Ltd. for more information on bankruptcy and debt solutions. Or please fill out the free bankruptcy evaluation form. To learn more please visit our YouTube Channel. Rumanek & Company have been helping individuals and families overcome debt for more than 25 years.  

 

Mindset is Everything

Mindset is Everything

Mindset is Everything

Many people in financial difficulty shy away from getting the most professional advice available, out of concern for social, financial, family, housing, or other consequences.  Calling a Trustee in Bankruptcy can be difficult simply because they have “bankruptcy” in their names!

A federally-licensed Trustee is the most qualified person to assist you with your debt situation. Most offer a free consultation. This helps you to decide if you are comfortable with the Trustee’s approach, and to find out your best options, whether bankruptcy, a consumer proposal, or something else entirely.  And more information leads to better decisions.

Contact Rumanek & Company Ltd. for more information on bankruptcy and debt solutions. Or please fill out the free bankruptcy evaluation form. To learn more please visit our YouTube Channel. Rumanek & Company have been helping individuals and families overcome debt for more than 25 years.  

Are the assets of the debtor’s spouse affected?

Are the assets of the consumer debtor’s spouse affected?

Are the assets of the debtor’s spouse affected?

The bankruptcy affects only the person who goes bankrupt. However, if the consumer debtor conveys or transfers property to his or her spouse for a value that is lower than its fair market value within one year prior to bankruptcy, then it is likely that the trustee, or the creditors in certain circumstances, will proceed to set aside the conveyance or transfer. The trustee can attach those assets that have been conveyed or transferred to the spouse or any other person who has not paid fair market value. These are called settlements, fraudulent preferences and reviewable transactions under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act. There is also a provincial legislation that is similar to these remedies.

If there is a discharge hearing, the bankrupt is required to submit a statement of income and expenses on a monthly basis to the trustee. The statement of income usually includes the net income of the spouse. In fixing an amount to be paid by the bankrupt as a condition of discharge, the court looks at the combined income, the expenses and the Superintendent’s standards. As a result, it is possible that some of the spouse’s income will be used in making payments to the estate even though the spouse is not bankrupt.

Contact Rumanek & Company Ltd.   for more information on bankruptcy and debt solutions. Or please fill out the free bankruptcy evaluation form. To learn more please visit our YouTube Channel. Rumanek & Company have been helping individuals and families overcome debt for more than 25 years.  

What happens to my house when I go bankrupt?

What happens to my house?What happens to my house when I go bankrupt?

The Trustee takes any equity you might have in your family home when you go bankrupt. This means that your house may be sold and the proceeds given to your creditors.  If you are a joint-owner, the Trustee may sell your interest to a non-bankrupt joint-owner.  If there is equity in the house most people consider filling a proposal for an amount higher then the equity in the house that they would lose in the bankruptcy.  Even in ther bankruptcy you can still pay the Trustee in bankruptcy your equity in the house and keep the house.

Contact Rumanek & Company Ltd. for more information on bankruptcy and debt solutions. Or please fill out the free bankruptcy evaluation form. To learn more please visit our YouTube  Channel.  Rumanek & Company have been helping individuals and families overcome debt for more than 25 years.