The Intangible
Changes
Many people are
understandably concerned about how a bankruptcy will impact
their lives after the case is closed. For these folks
who haven't yet filed, they are ordinarily thinking the
biggest change in their lives will be issues related to credit
scores and challenges in qualifying for
loans. However, when I ask my clients what is the
biggest change in their lives after they file bankrutpcy,
the first thing they say has nothing to do with credit scores
and loans. Instead, they always tell me they cannot
believe how much more peaceful their lives became.
They often say they did not realize how unbelievably
stressed out they were about the debts and how that stress was
impacting every aspect of their lives, partcularly their
close relationships with friends and family. After
bankruptcy, they report, life without all the stress is like a
little tast of heaven! The point is, don't understimate
the very valuable emotional relief you will feel once the
debts and all the attendant calls and collection and court
processes are in the past.
Credit Bureau Issues
Now, it's true that a bankruptcy stays on your credit
report for 10 years from the date of filing. Having that
on your credit report could impact your ability to obtain
certain kinds of insurance and it may also prevent you from
obtaining certain types of upper managment jobs in the
financial sector. However, a bankruptcy on your credit
report does not mean you will be unable to obtain a loan for
ten years. In fact, very shortly after you file
bankruptcy you will be targeted by local car dealerships who
are dying to give you a loan for a new vehicle.
Why? Because you are a borrower who now has no debt and
who cannot file bankrtupcy again for eight years. Thes
loans usually come with a double digit interest rate because
of your bankruptcy and previous credit problems, but the
point is you will be eligible for loans pretty quickly after
you file bankruptcy.
Improving your Credit Score
After bankruptcy, there are a couple of ways to start
raising your credit (FICO) score so you can begin qualifying
for decent interest rates on loans. First, you should
pull your credit report about three months after your case
closes. Review it closely to make sure that all of the
debts listed on it now say they have been discharged in
bankrutpcy. It is the creditor's responsibility to
update the credit bureau accounts on your credit report but
frequently they fail to do so. When that happens it
falls on you to initiate a dispute of the item to make sure it
shows that you no longer owe the debt. The instructions
for disputing innacurate items on your credit report are
usually printed right on the report itself. Disputing
innacurate accounts will help raise your credit score more
rapidly.
The other thing you should do to more rapidly raise your
credit score is to make sure you have at least three loans
with creditors who will report your timely payments to the
credit bureaus. I am no expert at credit scoring but the
articles I've read on the subject say it's good to have
different kinds of loans, too. So you may want to have a
car loan, a credit card, and perhaps an RC Willey or Les
Schwab type account where you are purchasing collateral over
time. The key is to make absolutely certain you get
loans that you know you can very easily afford. That
last thing you want to do is get a loan with a payment you
cannot afford and be right back in the same boat again!
Using these credit rehabilitation techniques, I've had
client raise their credit scores from the 400s to the high
600s during the two year period following bankruptcy.
You can do it!