Ready to say goodbye to student loan debt for good? Learn More
X

If I received a discharge, when can I refile?

1 minute read Upsolve is a nonprofit that helps you get out of debt with education and free debt relief tools, like our bankruptcy filing tool. Think TurboTax for bankruptcy. Get free education, customer support, and community. Featured in Forbes 4x and funded by institutions like Harvard University so we'll never ask you for a credit card.  Explore our free tool


In a Nutshell

If your bankruptcy was fully discharged, you can refile bankruptcy after a certain amount of time has passed. If you file before the time limit is up, you will not be entitled to have your debts discharged.

Written by Kristin Turner, Harvard Law Grad
Updated July 30, 2020


If your bankruptcy was fully discharged, you can refile bankruptcy after a certain amount of time has passed. If you file before the time limit is up, you will not be entitled to have your debts discharged.

Filing a Chapter 7 after a previous Chapter 7 discharge (8 years). For Chapter 7 bankruptcy filings, you must wait eight years from the filing date of your previous petition. Filing prematurely before those eight years have expired, you will not be granted a discharge. The eight years start counting from the date the prior Chapter 7 bankruptcy was filed.

Filing a Chapter 13 after a Chapter 7 discharge (4 years). If you need to refile for Chapter 13 bankruptcy after receiving a discharge in a previous Chapter 7 case, you must wait at least four years from the date the previous petition was filed for a complete discharge of your personal loans, medical bills, and credit cards.

If you file before those four years are up, your unsecured debts will not be discharged. The time limit is only applicable if you got a discharge (not a dismissal) for your Chapter 7 filing.

Filing a Chapter 7 after a Chapter 13 discharge (6 years). If you filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy and got a discharge and now need to file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you must wait at least six years from the filing date of your Chapter 13 case to receive a full discharge.

If you file before the six years are up, you must have paid unsecured creditors a minimum of 70% of their balance during the repayment plan set up through your Chapter 13 bankruptcy in order to now receive a discharge.

If you didn’t pay your unsecured creditors at least 70% and you file Chapter 7 within six years of your Chapter 13 filing, you will not get a discharge of debts.

Filing a Chapter 13 after a previous Chapter 13 discharge (2 years). If you had a Chapter 13 filing that ended with a discharge and you need to refile Chapter 13 again, you cannot file any sooner than two years from when your previous case was filed.

If you file within two years of your previous filing, you will not be entitled to have debts discharged in the new bankruptcy case.



Written By:

Kristin Turner, Harvard Law Grad

LinkedIn

Kristin is a recipient of Harvard Law School’s Public Welfare Foundation A2J Tech Fellowship. At Harvard Law, she served as a member of the Harvard Defenders, the Women’s Law Association, and the Harvard Law Negotiation Review. She was the 2016 – 2017 president of the Harvard Bla... read more about Kristin Turner, Harvard Law Grad

It's easy to get debt help

Choose one of the options below to get assistance with your debt:

Considering Bankruptcy?

Our free tool has helped 15,168+ families file bankruptcy on their own. We're funded by Harvard University and will never ask you for a credit card or payment.

Explore Free Tool
15,168 families have filed with Upsolve! ☆
or

Private Attorney

Get a free evaluation from an independent law firm.

Find Attorney

Learning Center

Research and understand your options with our articles and guides.

Go to Learning Center →

Already an Upsolve user?

Read Support Articles →
Y-Combinator

Upsolve is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that started in 2016. Our mission is to help low-income families resolve their debt and fix their credit using free software tools. Our team includes debt experts and engineers who care deeply about making the financial system accessible to everyone. We have world-class funders that include the U.S. government, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and leading foundations.

To learn more, read why we started Upsolve in 2016, our reviews from past users, and our press coverage from places like the New York Times and Wall Street Journal.