The BasicsBounce back fast after bankruptcy
By Liz
Pulliam Weston
Carefully rebuild your
credit and you could qualify for almost-normal rates, even a mortgage, in a year or two.
Here's what you need to do.
Anita Burleson has had trouble getting credit since her
bankruptcy two years ago, but she knows that's not true for every filer. The fact that
there are repeat bankrupts tells her that.
"When I was in bankruptcy court, there was a couple that
had filed for bankruptcy twice prior to this one," said Burleson, who lives in
Emerson, Ark. "How could they get enough credit to get them into this much debt
(three times)?"
Actually, almost anyone can get credit soon after a bankruptcy.
It's just a matter of knowing how.
It's true that bankruptcy deals a devastating blow to your
credit and your credit score, the three-digit number lenders use to gauge your
credit-worthiness. But the effects don't have to be lasting. Long before the bankruptcy
drops off your credit report, you could be qualifying for loans with good rates and terms.
Nothing is forever
Ken from Chicago filed Chapter 7 liquidation four years ago
after unemployment and overspending caused him to rack up more than $20,000 in credit card
and other unsecured debt. Today his credit scores range from 655 to 719, decent numbers
that are just below the cutoff to get most lenders' very best rates.
"I recently applied for a secured credit card (usually
reserved for people with troubled credit) and was informed that I qualified for an
unsecured card -- a possibility I hadn't even considered," Ken said. "While I am
going to be very careful with my new credit (card), I am heartened that creditors consider
me an acceptable risk."
If you're a recent bankrupt, here are two things you need to
keep in mind:
Nothing in credit is "forever." A bankruptcy legally can remain on your credit report for up to 10 years, but its effect on your credit score can start to diminish the day your case is closed -- if you adopt responsible credit habits such as paying your bills on time, using only a small portion of your available credit and not applying for too much credit at once.
You have to get and use credit to build your credit score. Living on a cash-only basis may be a smart choice for those who really can't handle credit. But if you want to rebuild your credit score, you can't sit on the sidelines.
Learn from your mistakes
Although repeat bankrupts show that getting credit after a
Chapter 7 or 13 filing is possible, you shouldn't want to emulate those who file more than
once.
At first glance, people who file more than one bankruptcy seem
to be beating the system: They run up big bills and then walk away.
Think about it a little more, though, and you'll see these
multiple bankrupts are really defeating themselves. Their debts and credit history often
mean they're paying out big bucks in high interest payments during the time when they're
prohibited from filing another bankruptcy (The 2005 bankruptcy law provides that, under
Chapter 7, eight years must elapse before you can re-file. If you go for Chapter 13 after
a Chapter 7, you must wait four years. Going from one Chapter 13 to another, two years
must elapse.)
And most people can't file for Chapter 7 liquidation if they
have significant assets to protect, such as home equity or savings. So these folks who are
repeatedly going broke often have little to show for all the money that's leaving their
pockets. Instead of building wealth over time, they're losing ground.
Instead, use your bankruptcy as a wake-up call to figure out
what's wrong with your finances and fix it.
If your problem was overspending, you'll find plenty of information on this site about creating and sticking to a budget. (See our Decision Center: Learn to budget).
If you didn't have enough savings to survive a job loss or other setback, get serious about establishing an emergency fund.
If you were sunk by medical bills, seek a job with insurance coverage or check to see if your state offers coverage.
Clean up your credit report
One of Burleson's biggest problems is that her credit reports
still show several accounts as open and overdue -- when in fact they were closed and the
obligations wiped out as part of her bankruptcy.
In order for her credit to recover, she needs to contact the
credit bureaus and insist that those accounts be properly reported as "included in
bankruptcy."
If you have other serious mistakes on your credit report, those
need to be corrected as well. Your credit score is based on information in your credit
report, so errors on your report can seriously dampen your score.
Get a secured credit card
You need two types of credit to quickly rebuild your credit
score:
Installment: Auto loans, student loans or mortgages
Revolving: Credit cards or home equity lines of credit
Most recent bankrupts have
trouble qualifying for a regular, unsecured credit card. So the best solution usually is a
secured card, which generally gives you a credit limit that's equal to an amount you
deposit at the issuing bank.
Typically, that's $200 to $500, which may seem like a pittance
compared to the credit limits you enjoyed before your bankruptcy. But don't make the
mistake of using your available credit. Maxing out your credit cards hurts your credit
score.
You don't want to charge more than 30% or so of your credit
limit, and you want to pay the balance off in full each month. Light, regular use of a
credit card is what helps build your credit.
And contrary to what you might have heard, you typically don't
need to carry a balance or pay credit-card interest to build your score, since the leading
credit scoring formula doesn't distinguish between balances that are paid off and balances
that are carried month to month. Get in the habit now of not charging more than you can
pay off every month; your credit score and your finances will be the better for it.
You also shouldn't just grab any secured card. Look for the
following:
No application fee and reasonable annual fee. Some secured cards tack huge upfront and annual charges onto their accounts; you don't need to pay these to build your credit.
Reports to the major credit bureaus. You're not doing your credit score any good unless your payment history is being reported to the three major bureaus: Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. Call and ask if the card issuer regularly reports to all three before you apply.
Converts to an unsecured card after 12-18 months of on-time payments. Good behavior should get you upgraded to a regular credit card within a year or two.
Get an installment loan
If you still have student loans (which typically aren't
dischargeable in bankruptcy), you can use them to rebuild your score. Make your payments
on time, all the time, and try to pay more than you owe whenever possible. Next to making
on-time payments, paying down your existing debt is one of the best ways to improve your
credit score.
Ken of Chicago took this to heart, making double or triple the
minimum payments required to retire his $23,500 student loan debt within three years of
his bankruptcy filing.
"The fact that I had to repay my student loans (rather than
having them discharged) might have helped me in the long run," he said.
Ken's credit has recovered enough that he's scheduled to close
escrow on a condo purchase later this month. He qualified for a 6.4% interest rate on a
30-year fixed mortgage.
Another option: a mortgage. Interestingly, it can sometimes be
easier to get a mortgage after a bankruptcy than to get other types of installment loans.
You may be able to qualify for a high-rate loan as little as six
months after a bankruptcy, but you're probably better off waiting until you can qualify
for an FHA loan. You can typically get one just two years after your bankruptcy case has
closed, as long as you've maintained good credit habits since then. FHA loans have
interest rates that are usually only half a percentage point higher than regular mortgage
rates.
Just make sure you really can afford a home before you buy one.
Many people wind up in bankruptcy court because they stretched too far to buy a house and
can't keep up with all the attendant costs of homeownership, said bankruptcy expert
Elizabeth Warren of Harvard University. (See "Don't bite off too much house" for more details.)
Auto loans can also help you rebuild your credit -- just be
prepared to pay nose-bleeding rates at first.
"My first vehicle out of bankruptcy (had an interest rate
of) 21%," said Chance Nelson of Indianapolis, who applied for the loan just a few
months after his debts were discharged. "After paying this for about 2 years, I went
and traded it in and purchased another (at) 13.99%."
Nelson refinanced this second loan a year later at 7.95%. Today,
five years after his bankruptcy filing, Nelson is paying a reasonable 6% rate for his auto
loan.
If you go this route, try to make a big down payment and choose
a loan that doesn't have a prepayment penalty. That way, you can refinance the car to a
lower interest rate as your credit improves.
Just don't forget: The key is to make sure all your payments are
made on time, all the time.
Liz Pulliam Weston's column appears every Monday and
Thursday, exclusively on MSN Money. She also answers reader questions in the Your Money message board.