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Paying for gender transition: Bankruptcy as a last resort

I have heard people making a gender transition say, “I will get it all done and then just declare bankruptcy.”

You never “just” declare bankruptcy. Bankruptcy often comes at a high price. In some cases, bankruptcy can be a good choice, but it should be a last resort. Doing it will affect your life for many years after.

Bankruptcy is legal and is your right in most countries. Many of us would not even have to think about bankruptcy if all insurance policies covered trans health care. Medical debt is the most common reason for bankruptcy in the United States.

Planning on bankruptcy is not a wise money plan. If you decide to declare bankruptcy, you need to have a very clear plan.

Overview

I am not a lawyer or accountant, and laws are different based on where you live. You will need to find out how what the law says where you live. Here are the basic parts.

Bankruptcy can be either voluntary (your choice) or involuntary (brought on by creditors). It can also be brought on if you have moved money to hide it from creditors or are found by a judge to have paid certain creditors more before the bankruptcy. For instance, if you pay your family and friends before your bank, you may get in trouble.

The US has one of the easiest bankruptcy systems in the world. A 1978 federal law made it even more easy. This was done so businesses that did not mean to fail would not be punished. That law made the number of personal bankruptcies go way up.

Summary

A bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 10 years, making it difficult to:

Bankruptcy is done in federal court. There is a filing fee to pay. You will probably need to pay a lawyer to help. There are two kinds of personal bankruptcy:

Chapter 13

Chapter 7

Both types of bankruptcies might do the following:

It will probably not erase things you owe like:

Bankruptcy resources

Please look into other options before bankruptcy. Here are a few places for more on what you might expect in your own case.

Federal Trade Commission (consumer.ftc.gov)

Credit.org (credit.org)

American Bankruptcy Institute (abi.org)

Next: Your four options

Disclaimer: This is legal talk, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change often. Some of this may not apply to you. It is presented without warranty. It may contain errors or omissions. You must do your own research.

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