Bankruptcy – Conversions
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Converting Between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
📌 What Conversion Means
Conversion is when a bankruptcy case is switched from one chapter to another — most commonly:
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Chapter 7 ➜ Chapter 13 (“up-conversion”)
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Chapter 13 ➜ Chapter 7 (“down-conversion”)
The Bankruptcy Code allows these conversions under 11 U.S.C. §§ 706, 1307, and 348, provided certain requirements are met.
🔄 Converting Chapter 7 ➜ Chapter 13
Why Convert:
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Save home or car by catching up on missed payments over time
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Protect non-exempt assets that might otherwise be liquidated by the Chapter 7 trustee
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Deal with priority debts (e.g., taxes, domestic support arrears) in an organized repayment plan
Requirements:
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Debtor must be eligible for Chapter 13 (regular income, debt limits under § 109(e))
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Must propose a feasible plan and show ability to make monthly payments
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Must not have received a Chapter 7 discharge in the last 8 years
Effect of Conversion:
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Case keeps the same filing date
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Automatic stay remains in place
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Chapter 13 trustee is appointed; payments begin promptly
🔄 Converting Chapter 13 ➜ Chapter 7
Why Convert:
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Loss of income or other hardship makes plan payments impossible
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Want a faster discharge of unsecured debts
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Avoid dismissal for plan default
Requirements:
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File notice or motion to convert under § 1307(a)
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Must qualify for Chapter 7 (pass means test, no recent 7 discharge)
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Property of the estate re-determined as of the conversion date (special rules apply)
Effect of Conversion:
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Chapter 13 plan stops; trustee files final report
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Non-exempt property as of conversion date may be liquidated by Chapter 7 trustee
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Certain debts incurred after filing but before conversion may be treated differently
⚖️ Key Considerations
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Strategic timing matters: Converting early can protect more property or avoid dismissal.
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Plan feasibility is crucial: When moving to 13, prepare updated schedules and a realistic budget.
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Attorney and trustee fees: Each chapter has different fee structures and trustee roles.
Converting Between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13
Factor | Chapter 7 ➜ Chapter 13 | Chapter 13 ➜ Chapter 7 |
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Why Convert | • Save home or car from foreclosure/repossession • Catch up on arrears over time • Protect non-exempt assets from liquidation • Deal with priority debts (taxes, support) |
• Loss of income makes plan infeasible • Want quicker discharge of unsecured debt • Avoid dismissal for missed plan payments |
Eligibility | • Must have regular income • Debts must be below §109(e) limits • Must not have a recent Ch. 13 bar to refiling |
• Must pass Ch. 7 means test (or show special circumstances) • Must not have received Ch. 7 discharge in last 8 years |
Effect on Case | • Filing date stays the same • Automatic stay continues • Ch. 13 trustee appointed • Must file feasible plan and start payments quickly |
• Ch. 13 plan stops • Property of the estate re-determined as of conversion date • Ch. 7 trustee may liquidate non-exempt assets |
Advantages | • Keep property that would have been sold in Ch. 7 • Cure arrears over 3–5 years • Consolidate debts into one payment |
• Often results in quicker discharge • Ends obligation to make plan payments • Can reduce legal/administrative burden |
Risks / Downsides | • Must maintain payments for 3–5 years • Failure can lead to dismissal or reconversion • More expensive (trustee percentage + attorney fees) |
• May lose non-exempt property • Certain debts (mortgage arrears, car loans) not restructured — risk of foreclosure or repossession |
Procedure | • Motion or notice to convert under §706(a) • File amended schedules & plan |
• Notice or motion to convert under §1307(a) • Update schedules if needed |
⚖️ Practice Tip
When counseling clients, discuss:
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Goals (keep house vs. quick discharge)
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Ability to pay going forward
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Impact on property and creditors
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Timing — sometimes conversion early in the case preserves more assets