A reaffirmation agreement is a contract signed during a Chapter 7 bankruptcy in which the debtor agrees to remain personally liable on a debt that would otherwise be discharged. Section 524(c) of the Bankruptcy Code authorizes reaffirmation. The most common contexts are vehicle loans and, less commonly, mortgages on a home the debtor wants to keep.
Reaffirmation is voluntary. The court is not allowed to require it. But many secured lenders – particularly captive auto finance companies – will press hard for a reaffirmation and may threaten to repossess the collateral if the debtor refuses.
For a reaffirmation to be enforceable, it must be signed before the discharge is entered, filed with the court, and either certified by an attorney as not creating undue hardship or approved by the court at a hearing. Pro se debtors must attend a reaffirmation hearing. Represented debtors typically avoid the hearing if the attorney signs the certification.
Most courts in the Southern District of Florida scrutinize reaffirmation agreements carefully. If the agreement requires payments the debtor cannot demonstrably afford from the budget on Schedules I and J, the court is unlikely to approve it.
For a Chapter 7 debtor who wants to keep a financed car, the options are:
For loans with substantial negative equity (you owe much more than the car is worth), reaffirmation rarely makes sense unless the car is essential and the debtor has no realistic alternative. Sometimes the better answer is to surrender, discharge the debt, and purchase a replacement vehicle with a new loan after discharge.
Most bankruptcy attorneys in Florida recommend against reaffirming a residential mortgage in Chapter 7. The reasons:
The flip side: some lenders will refuse to report current payments to credit bureaus on a non-reaffirmed mortgage, which can affect post-bankruptcy credit rebuilding. We discuss the tradeoffs with each client.
Section 722 of the Bankruptcy Code allows a Chapter 7 debtor to redeem tangible personal property by paying the lender the current fair market value in a single lump-sum payment. Redemption is most common for vehicles where the loan balance significantly exceeds the value. Specialty lenders will sometimes finance redemption payments.
Reaffirmation decisions are case-specific. The right answer depends on the equity in the collateral, the interest rate on the loan, the debtor's income, and the importance of the collateral to the household. Call 786-522-1411 or email email@attorneygoodwin.com to discuss your specific situation.