The goal of this post
Bankruptcy is intimidating because it feels like a black box. In reality, the first step is usually simple: gather your financial documents so an attorney can evaluate options.
This is general information, not legal advice for your specific situation.
What Chapter 7 is (plain English)
Chapter 7 is often described as a “fresh start” bankruptcy. It may wipe out certain unsecured debts, but it has eligibility rules and requires full financial disclosure.
Not everyone qualifies, and some debts may not be dischargeable. A proper review matters.
Your pre-consult checklist: documents to collect
Income
- Pay stubs (recent)
- Profit/loss statements if self-employed
- Benefit award letters (Social Security, disability, unemployment)
Taxes
- Last 2 years of tax returns (sometimes more)
Debts
- Credit card statements
- Medical bills
- Personal loans
- Collection letters
- Lawsuit papers or judgments
Housing
- Lease agreement, or mortgage statement
- Property tax bill and homeowners insurance info
Vehicles
- Loan statements
- Lease agreements
- Estimated value (a reputable online estimate is a starting point)
Assets
- Bank statements
- Retirement account statements
- Any real estate documents
Monthly expenses
Write down:
- Rent/mortgage
- Utilities
- Insurance
- Childcare
- Transportation
- Food
- Medical costs
What to avoid before you get advice
- Don’t transfer property to friends/family to “protect it.” That can create serious problems.
- Don’t ignore lawsuits—deadlines still apply.
- Don’t drain retirement accounts without understanding consequences.
If you’re overwhelmed by debt, a consultation can help you understand whether bankruptcy is appropriate, what alternatives exist, and what a realistic timeline looks like. Ginsburg Law Group, PC can help you review your situation and map out next steps.


