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Your ability to reestablish credit after filing
bankruptcy is better than it has ever been. After you get your discharge, you
will receive many solicitations from lenders offering to finance homes, vehicles
and credit cards.
Here are some tips on responsibly and
successfully reestablishing your credit:
- Open a checking or savings account. Lenders
may look at this to determine if you can responsibly handle money.
- Apply for store and gas credit cards that you
would normally pay cash.
- Apply for a secured card where you deposit
cash and charge against it. Pay advances back over two months so that they
will be reflected as positive marks on your credit report.
- Pay your utility bills and rent on time for at
least a year.
- Find a friend or relative to cosign for you on
a loan and pay it on time.
- Look for car dealers and mortgage brokers that
attest to be “bankruptcy friendly”. Buy a used car so you do not get hit
with the depreciation that occurs during the first two years of a new car
purchase.
- Stay away from payday loans that are at high
interest rates and are a “bad credit” trap.
- Write a letter to each credit reporting agency
explaining the circumstances that lead to you filing.
- Live within your means. Do not unnecessarily
increase your debt to income ratio by taking on credit to purchase luxury
items that you DO NOT NEED. Your payments on consumer debt should equal no
more than 20% of your expendable income after costs for housing and a
vehicle.
- Pay your reaffirmed, pre-bankruptcy debts on
time.
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