You report all assets and all liabilities. However, government insured or backed student loans are NOT dischargeable.
Yes, student loans can not be discharged in bankruptcy. You can consolidate your loans and get a smaller payment.
No you can't since it is for education and not for profitable activity. you may not receive your degree or loose your job if you are already working.
If the student loan is a federal loan and not a private loan then the answer is no. Federal student loans can not be included in bankruptcy, you will always be responsible for repayment of FEDERAL student loans.
Govt insured or guaranteed loans are NOT able to be discharged in BK.
While in general you should always follow your attorney's advice, you may wish a second opinion from another attorney this time. A bankruptcy does not get you out of student loans. If you were going to lose your income tax refund to the student loan people, then even after bankruptcy you still will.
See http://www.finaid.org/questions/bankruptcy.phtml for the answer.
It's my understanding that student loans are not discharged by bankruptcy any longer. YOu should check this, though
no it will stay with you forever like student loans
Gov't insured or Guaranteed loans are not dischargable.
Yes, but in the United States, student loan debt cannot be discharged in bankruptcy. You will still owe the money, and the interest.
I believe that student loans are a category of debt that is not dischargable in bankruptcy. The bankruptcy will show up on any credit reports, and you may subsequently be unable to et additional loans. I filed for bankrupcy in 1998. I was able to obtain Student Loans despite the bankruptcy in 1999-2000. My past credit history was not considered when determining my student loan application.
I didn't get your question. Are you trying to ask if you can able to file bankruptcy again even though you had filed previously one? As far as i know, Student loans won't discharge in bankruptcy. It's better consult this from the bankruptcy advisers.
Student loans are exempt from bankruptcy as are IRS debts
One can usually get student loans after bankruptcy so long as they meet the other eligibility requirements for those loans. Public policy mandates that a "well-educated" society is a "better" society, so for that reason student loans are protected from bankruptcy so lenders will freely give student loans without fear of being filed on. And, since student loans are excepted from discharge in bankruptcy, they're not generally too skittish about someone who has filed before. I have had several clients ask me that same question, and I tell them what I said above and I ask them to let me know if they ever do have a problem getting a student loan due to bankruptcy. So far, no one has ever called me saying the bankruptcy caused them any problems in getting student loans... for what it's worth. Please note that nothing in this posting or in any other posting constitutes legal advice; this is simply my understanding of the facts, which I do not warrant, and I am not suggesting any course of action or inaction to any person. that is not necessarily true. i filed bankruptcy and have had a steady job and even paid off a car loan that was applied for after the bankruptcy and I still cant get student loans. When you file for bankruptcy, you're still eligible for government loans, but not for private loans. These are the two basic types of loans. You should be able to qualify for government loans because these loans are based on need rather than credit