Posted On: January 24, 2010 by Scott Sagaria

San Diego Bankruptcy Attorney Discusses Rebuilding Credit

Bankruptcy can be good for your wallet??? If you’ve chosen to file bankruptcy, especially through a San Diego bankruptcy lawyer, you’ve considered the pros and cons and decided it was in your best interests. With that as a backdrop, then, the question becomes “how bad is bad?” In other words, what can you do to most expeditiously rebuild your credit? Well, in brief, you should be able to effectively rebuild your credit in two to three years. Here’s how:

Firstly, after the bankruptcy, get a credit card. Your first reaction may be “wait…that’s what got me into this mess.” Well, we are talking about rebuilding credit, so the process has to, not surprisingly, involve credit. Plus, what is available to you after bankruptcy in terms of credit cards is not going to be anything like what you had before. Typically, you can expect to have the card be secured. You are probably going to have to deposit a certain amount (generally between $200 and $500) in a bank and use that cash as collateral on the card. Your limit is however much you put in the bank. So, even though it is secured, it’s still credit.

Don’t be surprised if, in applying for credit, you get offers for unsecured cards. While you certainly should be careful using unsecured credit cards after a bankruptcy (because you are precluded by law from filing again for a number of years), you will definitely build your credit using these cards, just use them wisely.

Do your absolute best to pay off your post-bankruptcy credit cards, too. Many people believe that leaving a balance on a card is the best way to grow credit: that the banks like knowing who they can make money off of. This San Diego bankruptcy attorney does not agree. The credit formulas for FICO calculations just do not seem to be linked to balance-carrying. Your best approach is normal, periodic usage of the cards. That builds credit.

Next, you need more credit (to build credit). So, if you kept a car or mortgage during bankruptcy, keep paying it off. This is obvious, I know. But installment debt is a strong aid toward credit growth. Student loans count, too. While you will likely have a hard time getting a good interest rate on a new car purchase, you might get a better rate with a co-signer. As long as your Social Security number is the primary payee on the installment account, you’ll get the credit benefit.

Remember that credit is how you get credit. Be responsible and cautious and you may even qualify for an FHA loan on a mortgage within as little as eighteen months after filing for Chapter 7 relief. Generally, when considering a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy, just remember that while your credit report will assuredly reflect the bankruptcy filing for 7 to 10 years, you will likely significantly improve your credit in as little as two to three years.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)