Bankruptcy Means Test in St. Louis

The means test determines whether you qualify for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. It compares your household income to the Missouri median.

How It Works

The means test has two parts:

  1. Income comparison: Add your household gross income for the 6 months before filing and annualize it. If the result is below the Missouri median for your household size, you pass and qualify for Chapter 7.
  2. Expense deductions: If your income exceeds the median, you deduct IRS-allowed expenses plus actual secured debt payments. If your remaining monthly disposable income is below $92.50, you still qualify.

What Counts as Income?

  • Wages, salary, tips, overtime
  • Business income (net)
  • Rental income
  • Pension and retirement distributions
  • Unemployment compensation
  • Interest, dividends

Excluded: Social Security benefits are not counted on the means test under 11 U.S.C. section 101(10A).

What If I Fail?

  • File Chapter 13 -- No income limit for Chapter 13
  • Wait and refile -- If income was temporarily high (bonus, overtime)
  • Special circumstances -- Military service, serious illness, or caretaking may provide exceptions

Check Your Eligibility

Use the free 1328(f) screener to check whether a prior discharge affects your eligibility, or the means test tool for income-based eligibility.

Free Discharge Screener

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the means test?

The means test compares your household income to the Missouri median. If below, you qualify for Chapter 7 automatically. If above, you may still qualify after deducting allowed expenses. Learn more.

Does Social Security count?

No. Social Security benefits are excluded from the means test under 11 U.S.C. section 101(10A).

Do I include my spouse's income?

If married and filing individually, you must include your spouse's income unless legally separated, but you can deduct their separate expenses.

Open Bankruptcy Project Network