Yes. But not as much as if the husband did the bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy does not get discharged. Debts are discharged. The bankruptcy will remain on your credit report for 10 years from the date of filing. The debts that were discharged can remain for 7 years from the date of discharge, showing a zero balance and that they were discharged in bankruptcy.
Yes, discharged debts are generally noted as "included in bankruptcy" on a CR.
Not if the debt was discharged in the bankruptcy. If the judgment was on the credit report before the bankruptcy was filed and/or was discharged in the bankruptcy, the entry will still remain on the CR for seven years.
If a loan from a credit union has been discharged in bankruptcy court, that credit union cannot collect and must write the loan off.
Any foreclosure or bankruptcy affects your credit. And for anywhere from 7 -10 years.
:A bankruptcy under chapter 7 or 11, or a non-discharged or dismissed chapter 13 bankruptcy generally remains on your credit file for 10 years from the date filed. A discharged chapter 13 bankruptcy generally remains on your credit file for 7 years from the date filed.
It should be removed from the credit report in 2009. A bankruptcy remains on a credit report for ten years from date of discharge.
Yes, but only after the bankruptcy is removed from your credit report - which can take over ten years from the discharge.
The debt should be identified as being in bankruptcy or discharged in bankruptcy. It will remain on the list for 7 years. The bankruptcy will remain on the report for 10 years.
10 years
It will remain on the report for the required length of time and should be marked "included in bankruptcy."
Yes, you can have a civil judgment removed from your credit report if it was included and discharged in a bankruptcy, even if the judgment date is later than the bankruptcy discharge date. You may need to dispute the judgment with the credit reporting agencies and provide proof of the bankruptcy discharge to have it removed from your report.