Bankruptcy

A Plain-English Guide to Subchapter V (Small Business Bankruptcy)

If you’ve been told you don’t qualify for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 — especially because of high business debt — you may have another option:

Subchapter V of Chapter 11.

It was created to make bankruptcy more practical and affordable for small business owners and individuals with primarily business-related debt.

Let’s break it down in simple terms.


📌 What Is Subchapter V?

Subchapter V is a streamlined version of Chapter 11 bankruptcy designed for:

  • Small business owners
  • Individuals with significant business debt
  • People who exceed Chapter 13 debt limits
  • Owners who personally guaranteed business loans

It allows you to restructure debt without the complexity and cost of traditional Chapter 11.


🏢 Who Qualifies for Subchapter V?

To qualify, you must:

✔ Be engaged in commercial or business activity
✔ Have total debts under the current statutory cap (adjusted periodically — currently in the multi-million dollar range)
✔ Have at least 50% of your debt tied to business activity

This is often ideal for:

  • Contractors
  • Real estate investors
  • Franchise owners
  • Medical or dental practices
  • Retail or service business owners
  • Anyone who signed personal guarantees on business loans

⚖️ How Is Subchapter V Different From Regular Chapter 11?

Subchapter V was created to fix the biggest complaints about Chapter 11:

Traditional Chapter 11Subchapter V
ExpensiveMore cost-controlled
Creditor voting requiredPlan can be confirmed without creditor vote in many cases
Disclosure statement requiredUsually eliminated
Committee of creditors often appointedRare in Sub V
Lengthy processFaster timeline

It’s designed to reduce legal fees and speed up restructuring.


💰 What Does Subchapter V Allow You to Do?

Subchapter V allows you to:

  • Restructure large secured and unsecured business debt
  • Stretch payments over 3–5 years
  • Reduce certain unsecured balances
  • Modify payment terms
  • Potentially cram down certain secured debts
  • Keep your business operating

In many cases, it allows business owners to keep control while reorganizing.


📉 What Happens to Unsecured Debt?

Unsecured creditors (like vendors or business credit cards) may receive:

  • Partial repayment over time
  • A percentage of disposable income
  • Less than the full balance owed

Unlike Chapter 13, there is no strict debt cap forcing you out of eligibility once you qualify.


🏠 Can Individuals Use Subchapter V?

Yes — even if you are not currently operating a business.

If your debt primarily arose from business activity (such as personal guarantees), you may still qualify.

Many high-debt individuals who exceed Chapter 13 limits use Subchapter V as a restructuring tool.


⏳ How Long Does It Last?

Typically:

  • A repayment plan runs 3 to 5 years
  • You make payments based on projected disposable income
  • At completion, qualifying debts are discharged

💵 Is It Expensive?

Subchapter V is generally:

  • Less expensive than traditional Chapter 11
  • More expensive than Chapter 7
  • Often more expensive than Chapter 13

However, when you are dealing with high six-figure or seven-figure debt, it can be the most practical solution.

Cost depends heavily on complexity.


🚩 When Subchapter V Makes Sense

Subchapter V may be appropriate if:

  • You exceed Chapter 13 debt limits
  • You have large personal guarantees
  • You want to keep operating your business
  • You need structured repayment over time
  • You have significant secured debt that needs modification

❓ When It May Not Be the Best Fit

It may not be ideal if:

  • You have primarily consumer (non-business) debt
  • Your income is too unstable to fund a plan
  • Liquidation (Chapter 7) is available and simpler

📌 The Bottom Line

Subchapter V is not just “corporate bankruptcy.”

It is a powerful restructuring tool for:

  • Small business owners
  • High-debt individuals
  • People who exceed Chapter 13 limits

If you’ve been told you have “too much debt” for bankruptcy, Subchapter V may be the chapter that fits.

Bankruptcy law is more flexible than most people realize — but strategy matters.

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