Filing fee is $306. Pre-filing certificate for debt counseling, $50 or less and post-341 meeting certificate for financial management course, $50 or less.
Legal fee to an attorney, $1,000 or more. Some states allow non-lawyer document preparation, often for $400-$900.
To file for an LLC, you need to choose a name, file articles of organization with the state, create an operating agreement, obtain any necessary licenses or permits, and pay the required fees.
In Illinois, Chapter 7 eligibility requires that one must not be able to pay at least $6,000 over the next five years, or $100 per month, to unsecured creditors after expenses. Chapter 7 will likely be denied if one can pay at least $10,000 over five years, or over $166.67 per month. If one can pay unsecured creditors between $6,000 - $10,000 over five years, then Chapter 7 will be decided by a mathematical calculation. If one can afford to pay 25% or more of the unsecured debt, then a Chapter 7 will likely be denied. If one can't afford to pay 25% of the unsecured debt, Chapter 7 filing will likely be successful.
Yes, it is possible to pay HOA fees in advance.
The short answer is no. There are legal restrictions regarding when and how often you can file bankruptcy, as well as the type of bankruptcy (if any) you are eligible to file. You will likely need to be able to pay any court and legal fees involved, as well, so proceed with caution.
They don't have interest rates they just have member fees. You have to pay these fees each month in order to keep the card.
Yes. Chapter 7 means you can't pay your bills. It is not free to file and you need to get an attorney to do it for you.
Then the co signer would no longer have any liability to pay any debt you defaulted on.
The cost will depend on which type of bankruptcy you are filing. It costs less to file chapter 7, between $950 - $1,400. Expect to pay your attorney more if you are filing chapter 13: around $1,800 to $2,400. Most lawyers will offer a free consultation where they will talk about how much they charge.
Yes.
You need to get the proper forms, file them with your local courts and pay the fees for the filing.
You will need to file a new Chapter 13 bankruptcy, propose a new Chapter 13 repayment palnt and demonstrated to the Court's satisfaction that you have the ability to pay the plan payments.
You can file Chapter 13, but you would need to pay all creditors in full because you are not eligible to receive a discharge. If you want file Chapter 13 and receive a discharge, you must wait to file until 6 years have passed since your Chapter 7 case. You would to wait 7 years if you want to file another Chapter 7 case.
Maybe. If you can pay for it. If not, with our without some form of BK, no.
No, you can reaffirm it and continue to pay your obligation.
You can file contempt charges without the use of an attorney but there are a couple different fees that you will have to pay. You will have to pay to have your ex-husband served and you will have to pay the court costs. These fees vary by state and county.
A business cannot file a chapter 13. But a person can be evicted if he does not pay rent.
yes you can.all the forms you need are online. Although you will need to pay the filing fees