A Fresh Start for Your Home Equity Encumbered by a Tax Lien
A tax lien encumbering the equity in your home is dangerous. Chapter 13 takes away the danger.
A Fresh Start with an Income Tax Lien on Your Home
You owe income taxes, and now the IRS or state has recorded a tax lien on your home. Chapter 13 may get rid of both the tax and the lien.
A Fresh Start with Unpaid Property Taxes on Your Home
Falling behind on property taxes is dangerous, and scares your mortgage lender. Bankruptcy can help you deal with both.
Bankruptcy Timing: Include Income Taxes Owed for 2015 by Filing Chapter 13 in Early 2016
As of January 1, 2016 you can include any taxes you owe for the 2015 tax year in your Chapter 13 payment plan.
Chapter 7 and Chapter 13–Income Tax Lien Partly Secured by Equity in Your Home
If you don't have much equity in your home, so that a tax lien eats up all that equity and then some, how can you get rid of that tax lien?
Chapter 7 and Chapter 13–An Income Tax Lien Secured by Equity in Your Home
If you have enough equity in your home to cover a recorded tax lien, to keep your home you must pay that tax. Hereâs how bankruptcy helps.
Chapter 7 and Chapter 13–An Income Tax Lien on Your Home
Which kind of bankruptcy to file depends on whether there is equity for the lien and whether the underlying tax can be discharged.
Chapter 7 and Chapter 13–Newer Income Taxes
Income tax debts that can't be written off must be paid, either after a Chapter 7 case or during a Chapter 13 one.
Tax Day 2015: The 10 Most Important Ways Bankruptcy Helps Deal with Your Tax Debt
If you owe back taxes, bankruptcy can help, in many unexpected and powerful ways.
How Bankruptcy Handles . . . Income Tax Levies
A tax levy is an abrupt way the taxing authorities make you to pay a tax, by taking your assets or income. Stop levies through bankruptcy.
How Bankruptcy Handles . . . Both Income Taxes that Can Be “Discharged” and Those that Can’t, through Powerful Chapter 13
If you owe older and newer taxes, how can you write off all or most of the older and be protected while affordably paying off the newer?
How Bankruptcy Handles . . . Both Newer and Older Income Taxes at the Same Time, Those that Can Be “Discharged” and Those That Can’t
If you're behind on income taxes, covering more than one tax year, which is better: Chapter 7 or Chapter 13?
How Bankruptcy Handles . . . Income Taxes that Your Ex-Spouse Was Required to Pay but Is Now Paying through a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Case
When it's good for you that your ex-spouse is filing a Chapter 13 case, and how to keep it good.
How Bankruptcy Handles . . . Pending Income Tax Refunds under Chapter 7
If you are thinking about filing bankruptcy and have a tax refund coming, you can usually keep your refund if you get advice about doing so.
How Bankruptcy Handles . . . a Recorded Income Tax Lien that Is Partially Secured by Your Assets
A tax lien may attach to something you own, worth less than the amount of the tax you owe. How can you get rid of that tax lien?