I thought it was 7 or 10 years. We have been thru it but over that length of time. Today it still showed up for some reason.
The amount of time a bankruptcy stays on your credit report after discharge differs between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy. With Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the Chapter 7 stays on your credit report for 10 years. Chapter 13 bankruptcy, after discharge, it shows for 7 years on your credit report.
Yes, but only after the bankruptcy is removed from your credit report - which can take over ten years from the discharge.
Most of the time cancellation of debt will remain on your credit report for seven years. If the cancellation of debt is associated with a bankruptcy, it may take 10 years.
This shouldn't be on your credit report but often companies or individuals do not take it off. It is your responsibility to contact them and make sure it is accurate.
Not necessarily. Sometimes it can take a credit bureau a few months (or even longer) to take an old record off your credit report. The best advice I can give is to request a credit report after 10 years have passed. If the bankruptcy is still listed, you can dispute the record directly with the credit bureau. You can get a free credit report at www.annualcreditreport.com or from most housing counseling agencies. You can find these agencies by looking on www.hud.gov.
The amount of time a bankruptcy stays on your credit report after discharge differs between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy. With Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the Chapter 7 stays on your credit report for 10 years. Chapter 13 bankruptcy, after discharge, it shows for 7 years on your credit report.
Yes, but only after the bankruptcy is removed from your credit report - which can take over ten years from the discharge.
Never
Most of the time cancellation of debt will remain on your credit report for seven years. If the cancellation of debt is associated with a bankruptcy, it may take 10 years.
A dispute on a credit report can take up to 60 days to be resolved.
A chapter 7 bankruptcy filing remains on your credit report for 10 years. Chapter 13 bankruptcy remains for seven years. Under chapter 13 bankruptcy you repay at least a portion of the debt, so it is removed a little sooner.
This shouldn't be on your credit report but often companies or individuals do not take it off. It is your responsibility to contact them and make sure it is accurate.
Not necessarily. Sometimes it can take a credit bureau a few months (or even longer) to take an old record off your credit report. The best advice I can give is to request a credit report after 10 years have passed. If the bankruptcy is still listed, you can dispute the record directly with the credit bureau. You can get a free credit report at www.annualcreditreport.com or from most housing counseling agencies. You can find these agencies by looking on www.hud.gov.
There is the 10 year penalty.
If your vehicle is already up for repossession, it is already on your credit report as a delinquent or defaulted debt.
About 4 to 5 years
40,000,000,000