Filing bankruptcy raises questions about bank freezes, fund seizure, and account protection. Here is what Newark residents need to know.
It depends on whether you owe money to your bank:
In Chapter 7, the trustee can take non-exempt funds in your account on the filing date. However:
In Chapter 13, you keep your bank account funds and make plan payments from ongoing income.
Filing bankruptcy immediately stops bank levies through the automatic stay. Any post-filing levy attempt is a stay violation.
These funds are protected from creditors and the trustee under federal law:
Tip: Keep protected funds separate from other money to make tracing easier.
Only if you owe money to that bank. If not, your account should not be frozen. To be safe, open an account at a bank where you have no debts.
In Chapter 7, non-exempt funds on the filing date are part of the estate. Social Security, disability, and veterans benefits are protected.
If you owe your bank money, yes. Open at a different institution and move direct deposits.
In Chapter 7, wages earned after filing are not part of the estate. Pre-filing wages in the account may be exempt depending on the source.
Money already taken is generally gone. Some seizures within 90 days of filing may be recoverable as preferential transfers.
Use our free screener to check if prior filings affect your eligibility for a new bankruptcy discharge.
Free Discharge Screener How to File Guide