Most likely. They are two separate issues.
AnswerYes. It will show that you no longer owe the debt, as well. AnswerIt MAY show up, however, if the debt for the vehicle was discharged in bankruptcy, it cannot be reported. There can be no negative reporting on a discharged debt - not even for a voluntary repo. If the vehicle was surrendered as part of the bankruptcy, the loan should show as a ZERO balance, no past dues, and 'included in bankruptcy' on your credit report.You can write the CRA's giving them the date the BK 13 was finished (discharged). You will also need to supply court info, or send copies of the final discharge papers.
A voluntary reposession reports on your credit report as a loss. The car company with take the car back and credit a portion of the balance which the owner/leaser still needs to pay on. The creditor will place the "voluntary Reposession" on credit bureau. All in all it will be reported as a charge off debt. If the original owner/leaser doesnt pay the remainder he/she can/will be collected from and could face legal action. A repo is a repo voluntary or not. Ruins your credit for 7 years. What generally happens is that it will be reported on your credit as a repossession. When you go for financing on something else, the repo will pop up and the potential lender will call the lender who reported the repo. When they find out it was a voluntary, it may actually lessen some of the blow of having a repo. But, yes, a repo is a repo.
yes, it will remain on your credit reports for 7 years
Lots of reasons:Your term of enlistment is up and you have not re-signed.If you have sub-standard fitness reports and do not do your job well.You have committed crimes (drug use included.)You are retiringYou have been injured and are being discharged on disability.
BK, as a matter of Federal Court records, is available almost indefinately. Virtually all credit reports from the major credit agencies will report it for 10 years from discharge, in their normal format. As information services, a longer, or shorter, time period may be requested and provided, depending on what the requester wants to pay for.
Yes, if it is not a perfected lien against real property and the debt was discharged in the bankruptcy.
Same as everywhere else. Bankruptcies are included in most credit reports for 10 years from the time of discharge. Bankruptcies are not debts...those are generally discharged or paid in BK....but they are reported, generally, for 7 years. As a matter of legal courts public record, the BK itself is able to be found on many other searches for just about forever.
It doesn't erase anything on your own credit report....just adds to it, why would it change someone elses? It adds that you are a bankrupt as well as having missed payments and had a repossession. A credit report simply reports what happened in the past....what ever you do now does not change it...you live with the history you created.
Can it? Yes, by the lender in some case. If the debtor is actively attempting to hinder repossession in many states, or if the vehicle is in possession of a third party who is not on the loan or vehicle registration, then a repossession agent may file a stolen vehicle report. Most will not, preferring to allow the lender to take such action instead.Can it be reported stolen by the debtor once repossession takes place? Often vehicles are reported stolen after repossession happens. However, this is a cautious area. Most debtors already know the vehicle is being sought, and law enforcement takes a dim view of filing false or malicious reports.
This is onl;y a tax form, it only reports financial events that have happened...it does not make them. An OID form is reporting original issue discount and that has nothing to do with cancellation of debt in any case.
There are 2 ways to remove a repossession from your credit report. You can dispute it to the credit bureaus under the FCRA and they have 30 days to verify the listing or it must be removed from your credit reports or you can contact the creditor that repossessed the car and negotiate the removal of it upon payment of any money owed. The entry is likely to be changed to late, but paid. Most of these fall off after 7 years.
7 years Bankruptcies are included in most credit reports for 10 years from the time of discharge. bankruptcies are not debts...those are generally discharged or paid in BK....they are reported, generally, for 7 years. As a matter of legal courts public record, the BK itself is able to be found on many other searches for just about forever.