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The Truth About Bankruptcy

Taxes and Bankruptcy: The Nuts and Bolts


Most people think that filing bankruptcy can't get rid of taxes. This is not true. Both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code provide for the elimination of substantial amounts of personal "income" tax liability.

There are, however, certain requirements...but when these requirements are met....taxes can be eliminated as easily as unsecured credit card debt.

What Taxes Are Dischargeable In Chapter 7?

Substantial personal "income" taxes can be eliminated through the filing and subsequent discharge of a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. However, to be dischargeable, all of the following requirements must be met. These requirements must be applied separately to each tax year in question:

  1. The only IRS tax that can be discharged is "income" tax. You cannot get rid of other taxes, as for instance, withholding taxes.
  2. It must be at least 3 years since the tax return was due. That is, it must be at least 3 years since the last day that the tax return for the year in question could have been filed without being considered overdue. For instance, for the tax year 1999, assuming that you did not get any "extension", the 3 year period started on 4/16/2000. If you got an extension to file the return, that would have made your tax return overdue only as of 8/16/2000; in which case you start counting the 3 year period from this date. If you got 2 extensions, the 3 year period would have started on 10/16/2000.
  3. The tax return must have been actually filed at least 2 years before the date the Chapter 7 case is filed. For instance, regardless of when the tax return was due, if you only filed the tax return one year ago, the tax is not dischargeable in Chapter 7.
  4. The tax you are trying to discharge must have been "assessed" by the IRS at least 240 days before the Chapter 7 case is filed. For instance, lets say all the other rules are satisfied, but due to an audit, the IRS makes an additional assessment 100 days before the bankruptcy filing, the new amount assessed is not dischargeable.
  5. You must not have made a fraudulent return or willfully attempted to even or defeat the tax. This rule is almost never a problem, but it must be kept in mind for that rare case where fraud or tax evasion is in issue.
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What about Chapter 13?

In Chapter 13, all the same rules apply. 

Under the OLD bankruptcy law (before 10/17/05), there was no requirement that the tax return be filed. That was an important and crucial distinction. There were many times when a client met all the other requirements, but....as it turned out....either the client did not file the return for the tax year...or the client did....but could not prove it. This situation came up a lot in handling bankruptcy cases, making Chapter 13 under the old law, in the right situation, a very valuable tool for the discharge of taxes.  Under the NEW law, this special exception was eliminated.

However, there are still some extra tax benefits from filing Chapter 13: In Chapter 13, even if an income tax is non-dischargeable, there are still 2 big benefits of filing bankruptcy under Chapter 13. First, although the tax is non-dischargeable, you can get rid of the penalties. Second, the filing of your Chapter 13 case stops the IRS from assessing future penalties and interest. This is important because paying the tax back without interest is a lot cheaper than paying it "outside" of bankruptcy with interest continuing to accrue.

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What if the IRS has filed a tax lien?

A "tax lien" is where the IRS files a Notice of Lien in a local County Clerk's office. The filing of a tax lien does not make a dischargeable tax into a non-dischargeable tax.....but the filing of a tax lien can...as a practical matter... substantially diminish the benefit. The reason is this. When a tax is dischargeable....by this we mean that it can be gotten rid of as a "personal" obligation of the taxpayer. What a tax lien does is put a lien on the things the taxpayer owns. More specifically, a tax lien is a lien against "all personal property" of the taxpayer, no matter where the property is located, and a lien against any and all real property that happens to be located in the county where the tax lien is filed. A lien works like this. It encumbers the property on which it affects, much like a mortgage encumbers your house.

For purposes of bankruptcy, if you want to keep the property encumbered by a tax lien, you have to pay the IRS....at least up to the value of the property encumbered. For instance, say you own a home that is worth $100,000, on which you have a mortgage with a payoff of $90,000. And say you owe the IRS $30,000 in taxes for taxes old enough to be discharged. If the IRS files a lien for $30,000 in the county where this real property is located, the lien would....in effect...eat up the $10,000 in the value of your home above what is owed on your mortgage. For purposes of Chapter 13, if you want to keep your home, you would have to figure in to your Chapter 13 plan payments sufficient to pay the full $10,000 to the IRS, plus interest. Assuming the lien does not encumber any other property, the other $20,000 would be discharged in the Chapter 13 case. The good news is that...although the $10,000 needs to be paid to the IRS....in Chapter 13, the IRS can be forced to take payments over the life of the plan, which can be up to 5 years, making the payment of this debt more affordable, while preserving your right to keep your home.

For purposes of Chapter 7....using the same example....and since liens generally "pass through bankruptcy" unaffected, the tax would be discharged, but the tax lien would remain a lien on your home after your bankruptcy case is done.

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How Do You Find Out All The Information About My Taxes?

We make a special written request to the IRS for information. Getting information from the "horse's mouth" is the only way we can properly represent you. As for information about taxes you may owe the State...and using North Carolina as an example....we call the local Bankruptcy Department for the Tax Revenue office. We have a good working relationship with the people that run this office....a relationship built over many years.

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What about "income" taxes assessed by a State government?

With very few exceptions, the same rules that apply to the IRS, also apply to the State.

Disclaimer:

The discussion of taxes above has been greatly simplified to promote understanding, and results will vary greatly depending upon your particular assets, debts, income, expenses, and the timing of your filing.

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