Your 5-Minute Guide to Bankruptcy

Here are tips for limiting the damage before, during and after your filing.

By MSN Money staff

Published July 13, 2007

Overwhelmed by debt? Bankruptcy is the means of last resort to rebuilding your financial well-being.

Before you make a decision to file for bankruptcy, consider the following:

Bankruptcy may be your best option if it will take more than five years to pay off your unsecured debt, such as credit cards and medical bills. Bankruptcy will not relieve you of secured debt -- where the creditor holds a lien -- like a mortgage or car loans. It also won't end your obligation for most student loans, child support, alimony or recent taxes.

6 tips for a smoother bankruptcy filing

If you decide that bankruptcy is necessary for your emotional and financial well-being, take these steps:

For most people, there are two types of personal bankruptcy:

After you file, an "automatic stay" stops all collection attempts. The stay is temporary for secured debt, so you need to make payments or face repossession or foreclosure. You'll attend a creditors meeting (creditors rarely attend), where a trustee will finalize your case. You'll be required to attend a finance management course.

After you file

Take these steps as soon as possible after you file: