Payday loans carry extreme interest rates -- often 400% APR or higher. Bankruptcy can eliminate payday loan debt, but there are important considerations.
Yes. Payday loans are unsecured debt and are generally dischargeable in bankruptcy. In Chapter 7, the debt is eliminated entirely. In Chapter 13, you pay a percentage through your plan.
Most payday lenders require electronic access to your bank account (ACH authorization). After filing, the automatic stay prohibits withdrawals, but some lenders process them anyway.
Unauthorized withdrawals after filing are stay violations under 11 U.S.C. section 362(k), entitling you to damages.
Payday lenders occasionally argue non-dischargeability under 11 U.S.C. section 523(a)(2). They may claim you took the loan knowing you would file, had multiple simultaneous loans, or gave false income information.
In practice, these challenges are rare and rarely successful. Courts recognize that payday borrowers are in financial distress and that the lending model relies on repeat borrowing.
Bankruptcy can eliminate all payday loans simultaneously. List every lender on your schedules -- including online lenders. Revoke ACH authorization with all of them.
Yes. Payday loans are unsecured debt, dischargeable in both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13.
They are legally prohibited. The automatic stay stops all collection. Revoke ACH authorization and notify your bank. Unauthorized withdrawals are stay violations.
Rarely, and rarely successfully. The burden is on the lender to prove fraud.
Yes. List every lender on your schedules. Revoke ACH authorization with each one.
Consult an attorney. Filing promptly stops all collection through the automatic stay.
Use our free screener to check if prior filings affect your eligibility for a new bankruptcy discharge.
Free Discharge Screener How to File Guide