i have 2 dogs and I go through about 40 dollars a month just in food and thats buying cheap food. Would putting down 75 on my schedules be too much? That would be an average for food and vet bills, assuming they stay healthy... Thanks
top Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
what can you put down for pet expenses
Collapse
X
-
How about for above median filers? They have to abide by form B22C and there is no place to put the expense that makes sense to me. I have a wellness plan of about $32 month plus about $50 for food, treats, and toys...add another $10 for heartworm preventative and flea control...so about $92/month.March 2009 - Filed Ch 13
April 2009 - 341 Meeting 
Sept 2009 - Confirmed
April 2014 Plan completed
May 2014 - Discharged!!
Comment
-
They have to abide by B22C IRS Standards, only that they do not exceed them. If you can provide proof of the expenses to the trustee, then I suppose they could say no, and you would need to pay for those things from your food expenses/entertainment/expenses.
A quick google search provides two things for you to look at.
First, a posting on a different forum.
Old 10-11-2004, 11:23 AM
kopes kopes is offline
Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 51
Lady is right, all areas are different. I am a single parent with two kids and listed food as $600 a month, plus school lunches as $70 a month. The trustee normally lives in the same as you do and will know what reasonable expenses are. Put what you normally spend and see what happens. Your lawyer, if you have one, will be able to tell what the trustee considers too much. Here in MN you can put expenses for your pets. At my 341 someone did not put any value on her pets or put expenses for them and the trustee asked her why. He said "You feed them, don't you?" She was able to add that expense.
Second,
A chapter 13 trustee expense spreadsheet. Not the pet area, it says $20 max, or provide receipts.
So it is all trustee preference really.Last edited by optimistic1; 02-16-2009, 12:16 PM.
Comment
-
My dog is everything to me ( like many of you) and she has health insurance. I would almost rather get rid of mine than hers. I pay 70 mth for her insurance. I already dropped the wellness and kept the cancer. She is over 10 1/2 yrs. and now is the time I need it..I hope I wont have problems with it
Comment
-
Figure out what you spend per year on dog food and also on vet care/shot updates, heart worm meds, etc. Divide it by 12 to come up with an approximate monthly figure. That is what we did for our Dachshund and our cat. Don't go overboard; be reasonable as you can buy food in bulk quantities. Your attorney will advise you if he/she thinks the amount is too high.Originally posted by helpsoneeded View Posti have 2 dogs and I go through about 40 dollars a month just in food and thats buying cheap food. Would putting down 75 on my schedules be too much? That would be an average for food and vet bills, assuming they stay healthy... Thanks_________________________________________
Filed 5 Year Chapter 13: April 2002
Early Buy-Out: April 2006
Discharge: August 2006
"A credit card is a snake in your pocket"
Comment
-
Also, I found that my vet had really great records and was able to tell me exactly what we spent on our dog last year, plus they gave me duplicate receipts. For some reason i couldn't locate my "dog" folder in my file cabinet. Found it about a month later in a different spot.
Anyway, once I had that info I figured in how much dog food we used in a month and then added in the vet expenses. We put down $75 (for one dog who is on 2 different daily meds) and that was probably the only thing the UST didn't blink at, lol!11/18/08 filed CH 7; 341: 12/11/09, cont'd to 01/06/09
03/21/09 341 hearing for CH 13
04/27/09 Confirmation hearing for CH 13
$199/mth for 60 months + $9K 2008 income tax refund
Comment
bottom Ad Widget
Collapse
Comment