The only thing getting a Ch 7 from the Means Test buys you is it stops Creditor objections. The Trustee and/or Judge can still object.
I don't know if actual expenses on Sched J will be held to IRS standards or not. IRS living standards came about as a guideline for the IRS to figure payments when a person owes taxes and wants to pay back via a payment plan. The IRS standards are very low and do not increase exponentially with an increase in income. The base for food for an income at $1K/mo or less may be $500, as an example. Where the base for $5K/mo or more is $1000. Those aren't real numbers, but hopefully you catch the drift. Making 5 times more money does not get you 5 times more expense allowance.
Currently, we rent a house for $1400/month plus about $300 more/month for utilities. The IRS allowable for our area for rent and utilities combined is $969 total. I know of ONE apt complex that rents 3 BR apts of decent size for $1000/month, others are $1200-$1400 for 3 and 4 BR's. That's about the going rate, $1000/mo, for small 3 BR houses too. We have 6 people in our family. We would have people tripping over people in those houses and apartments. But still, the costs to rent here are actually higher than the IRS allowable for rent and utilities combined.
I've been looking at old and new filings at PACER trying to get a feel for what we could or could not claim. People are claiming much higher expenses than the IRS Standards on new filings. Old filings were the same way. People claim what they really spend for food, gasoline, utilities, auto payments, auto maint and repairs, etc. While real numbers here were allowed under the old law, only time will tell if the numbers hold or not under the new law. The first of the new cases in our area was filed late December 05, and has only just now gotten passed the 341 meeting point.
I don't know if actual expenses on Sched J will be held to IRS standards or not. IRS living standards came about as a guideline for the IRS to figure payments when a person owes taxes and wants to pay back via a payment plan. The IRS standards are very low and do not increase exponentially with an increase in income. The base for food for an income at $1K/mo or less may be $500, as an example. Where the base for $5K/mo or more is $1000. Those aren't real numbers, but hopefully you catch the drift. Making 5 times more money does not get you 5 times more expense allowance.
Currently, we rent a house for $1400/month plus about $300 more/month for utilities. The IRS allowable for our area for rent and utilities combined is $969 total. I know of ONE apt complex that rents 3 BR apts of decent size for $1000/month, others are $1200-$1400 for 3 and 4 BR's. That's about the going rate, $1000/mo, for small 3 BR houses too. We have 6 people in our family. We would have people tripping over people in those houses and apartments. But still, the costs to rent here are actually higher than the IRS allowable for rent and utilities combined.
I've been looking at old and new filings at PACER trying to get a feel for what we could or could not claim. People are claiming much higher expenses than the IRS Standards on new filings. Old filings were the same way. People claim what they really spend for food, gasoline, utilities, auto payments, auto maint and repairs, etc. While real numbers here were allowed under the old law, only time will tell if the numbers hold or not under the new law. The first of the new cases in our area was filed late December 05, and has only just now gotten passed the 341 meeting point.
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