Bankruptcy Law, Consumer Bankruptcy

How the Homestead Exemption Works in Bankruptcy

When filing for bankruptcy many clients worry about losing everything they own, including the roof over their heads. However, the U.S. Bankruptcy Code provides bankruptcy exemptions, which allow the filer to protect certain property from being sold off during the course of bankruptcy. The State of Florida offers some of the most generous exemptions in the country for bankruptcy filers, including the homestead exemption.

The homestead exemption allows the filer to protect the equity he or she has in the home in which the filer resides. Florida bankruptcy law allows the filer to claim an exemption on his or her homestead for the full amount of the home, allowing him or her to keep the property during the bankruptcy. The key is, however, the homeowner must have bought and owned the property for at least 1,215 days prior to the bankruptcy filing.

Foreclosure Defense, Foreclosures

Florida Foreclosure Filings Increase by 71 Percent Since 2021

Foreclosure rates in the State of Florida are on the rise by over 71 percent since 2021, according to new foreclosure data released by real estate company, ATTOM. As a result, Florida now ranks number two for the top five states with the highest level of foreclosure starts.

Rates have been steadily increasing throughout the year as pandemic relief programs have ended.  ATTOM reports that 9,284 foreclosure filings were made in the past quarter with 6,671 of these being foreclosure starts. Fortunately, foreclosure starts are still behind where they were before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, even though numbers are starting to rise.

Bankruptcy Law, Consumer Bankruptcy, Divorce

How Will a Bankruptcy Case Affect my Pending Divorce?

People will hold off on filing for bankruptcy for several reasons, especially if they are in the midst of a pending divorce case. The fear is that a bankruptcy case will affect the ability of the parties in a divorce case to divide their property. While a bankruptcy case will not affect a family law court’s ability to handle child custody and child support matters, the bankruptcy will prevent the court from finalizing a division of marital property.