no not responsible, only if you are a co-signer/joint account holder
No one. The person left is not responsible for the debt. The credit cards want people to think that the family owes for the deceased debt, but they don't.
No - a person's debts die with them. The spouse of a deceased person is not responsible fofr their outstanding bills.
If the deceased person is your wife then I think you are responsible for her medical bills
In Florida, the executor or personal representative of the deceased's estate is responsible for notifying credit card companies of the cardholder's death. The estate is generally responsible for paying off any outstanding credit card debt using the deceased person's assets. Family members are not typically personally liable for the deceased person's credit card debt.
The estate of the deceased is responsible for paying all the deceased's lawful debts.
A joint bank account or more likely a portion of such might become part of the deceased estate depending upon how the account is held. Most accounts held jointly by family members are done so under the law of rights of survivorship and therefore revert to the living account holder(s) upon the death of the another. In any case, just being a joint account holder does not make the person responsible for the repayment of debt incurred by the deceased.
Bank's Insurance company
Only if that person is the deceased's spouse.
If the person wishes to keep the residence then he or she will need to reaffirm or assume the loan with the mortgage holder. Real property debts such as homes and vehicles are not treated the same as unsecured debts when it relates to the death of the account/property holder.
It will come from the deceased person's estate.
Only if you are a joint debtor. Surviving family membes are not responsible for the debts of deceased parents, siblings or other relatives. The exception might be if the person signed an agreement with a care facility, hospital, medical clinic, doctor, etc. to be responsible for debt incurred during the deceased person's treatment/confinement.
how long can you leave house in deceased name