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What Is The Bankruptcy Trustee Looking For

By Cathy Moran

bankruptcy trustee and bank statements

What’s the bankruptcy trustee looking for when you submit your bank statements before the 341 meeting?

Let me tell you what the trustee isn’t looking for: trustees don’t care if you bought the premium brand of coffee; paid for your kid’s sports team; fixed broken appliances; went on vacation; or bought concert tickets. No part of the Bankruptcy Code makes those expenditures meaningful.

Disclosure is the name of the game

Trustees essentially want to know that your bank records generally match the information you provided in the schedules you filed with the court.

  • Do your deposits generally match the income you reported?
  • Are there transfers to accounts you didn’t disclose?
  • Are there large and unexplained withdrawals?

When things don’t line up

And, if the records don’t align with the schedules, the trustee wants an explanation.

As long as the explanation doesn’t reveal efforts to hide money or assets acquired with that money, you (and your discharge) are just fine.

If examination of the records show you innocently forgot something , that’s OK too. Fix it with an amendment to your schedules.

When your discharge is at risk

OK, that headline is misleading. In the real world, denial of discharge is extremely rare and usually involves crooks.

The Bankruptcy Code starts from the proposition that every individual gets a discharge in their Chapter 7 case. Then, it calls out the exceptions, the reason why a debtor doesn’t get a discharge.

Broadly, the things that result in a challenge to your discharge are engaging in a scheme to hide assets from creditors; failure to make honest disclosure or cooperate with the bankrutpcy system; or having gotten a bankruptcy discharge too recently.

As long as you haven’t committed one of the disqualifying acts, you get a discharge. No one evaluates your pre bankruptcy spending to see if you are “worthy” of a discharge. There is no requirement that you have been frugal, or wise, or disciplined in your spending before filing.

What bankruptcy trustees are looking for is just the full financial story as shown in your records.

More from the Soapbox

  • Acing Bankruptcy’s Means Test For Those Over Median IncomeAcing Bankruptcy’s Means Test For Those Over Median Income
  • What looks bad to the trustee in prebankruptcy conductWhat looks bad to the trustee in prebankruptcy conduct
  • Who Cares About Your Spending Before Bankruptcy?Who Cares About Your Spending Before Bankruptcy?
  • When Bankrupting The Business Doesn’t Protect The OwnerWhen Bankrupting The Business Doesn’t Protect The Owner
  • What’s The Income Limit for Filing BankruptcyWhat’s The Income Limit for Filing Bankruptcy

Filed Under: Before You File, Featured Tagged With: 2024, bankruptcy process, spending

About Cathy Moran

I'm a veteran bankruptcy lawyer and consumer advocate in California's Silicon Valley. I write, teach, and speak in the hopes of expanding understanding of how bankruptcy can make life better in a family's future.

Bankruptcy Basics

About The Soapbox

You’ve arrived at the Bankruptcy Soapbox, a resource of bankruptcy information and consumer law.

Soapbox is a companion site to Bankruptcy in Brief, where I try to be largely explanatory and even handed (Note I said “try”).

Here, I allow myself to tell stories and express strong opinions. We dig deeper into how to consider bankruptcy and navigate a bankruptcy case.

Moran Law Group
Bankruptcy specialists for individuals and small businesses in the San Francisco Bay Area

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