If a creditor has a judgment against you, they can garnish wages, levy accounts, and lien property. Bankruptcy can stop enforcement and may eliminate the debt.
A judgment is a court order establishing that you owe a specific amount. With a judgment, creditors can:
Under section 522(f), judicial liens impairing an exemption can be removed:
Judgments from these debts survive bankruptcy:
Yes, if the underlying debt is dischargeable. Most judgments from credit cards, medical bills, and personal loans can be discharged. Fraud, support, and DUI judgments cannot.
Yes. The automatic stay immediately stops garnishment the moment you file.
Possibly. Under section 522(f), judicial liens impairing your $450,000 homestead exemption can be avoided.
Generally not recoverable. Some garnishment within 90 days of filing may be recoverable as a preferential transfer.
No. A judgment creditor is treated the same as any other unsecured creditor in bankruptcy.
Use our free screener to check if prior filings affect your eligibility for a new bankruptcy discharge.
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