You do not have to report bankruptcies to future employers unless they require and pull your credit report. If they ask on your application form, you always have the right to refuse to answer.
The future tense of report is will report.
The future tense of report is will report.
Tradelines: 7 years Bankruptcies: 10 years
Depends on the state/province, and country, and the individual credit agency. And additional bankruptcies will stay on longer At least 6 years, up to 10 years for first bankruptcies, and 14-20 years for additional bankruptcies
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Derogatory marks such as late payments, foreclosures, or collections typically stay on your credit report for 7 years. Bankruptcies can remain on your credit report for up to 10 years.
A chapter 11? A farm? Bankruptcies are not "seen" by credit reporting bureaus, they just report them. They can see them any time by logging on to a bankruptcy court web site with their log-in info. They can only report bankruptcies up to 10 years after the filing date.
Bankruptcies (both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13) remain on your credit report for 10 years.
You can get a list of your past employers by requesting a copy of your free background report. This is available through large companies like Nexus Lexis. They issue one report for free.
Your score will be very low. And it will remain low for quite sometime since bankruptcies can stay on your report for 10 years or more.