Originally posted by GoingDown
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People worry too much about whether it is called judgment proof or collection proof. They are really the same thing.
But since debt collectors know that I am collection proof, they usually don't bother trying to get a judgment against me, so in that sense, I guess you could say I am judgment proof.
My home is rented. I don't own any real estate. I don't intend to ever own any real estate. I like to be able to move around to get away from bad neighbors and stuff like that.
My only vehicle is currently worth less than $5,000 (according to the Kelly Blue Book) which is exempt under Arizona law. It's not new and pretty, but it gets me where I want to go.
I don't have a checking account. No savings account, no investments. Which also means no fees for bouncing checks, etc.
I use cash, money orders, and pre-paid Visa cards for everything. I find that I spend far less when I have to hand over cash to some cashier at a store or restaurant.
I do temp jobs that last for no more than a month or two at best. Most last less than one month. By the time they started garnishing wages, the job would be over, and I would be moving on to a different job. I get these jobs at a free job service which posts temporary job listings in my area. A lot of people aren't willing to work at temp jobs, but they are good money (as long as you live cheaply) and they give me flexibility to go on lots of vacations to places like Oregon (to visit relatives) whenever I feel like it. I'm not tied down to job. To be honest, I don't think I could handle a regular job that went on month after month, year after year. It would be horrible for someone like me.
The other things I do are self-employed things that are very difficult (and time consuming which is expensive for lawyers) for any creditor to figure out. I certainly would never volunteer this information to any creditor and I honestly don't know how they would ever figure it out. In the unlikely event that they did a judgment exam, my self employment could suddenly, easily, and voluntarily drop to zero, so they still wouldn't get anything. The kind of work I do requires just a few cheap tools (which are exempt under Arizona law), and no inventory. I just buy stuff at Home Depot when I need it for a job, rather than keep an inventory. Creditors would have nothing to seize.
I do not use credit for anything. I will not even apply for a job that checks my credit report. My credit report has no recent activity. That looks bad to a debt collector.
I understand that most people would not want to live this way, but for those who want to drop below creditor radar screens, this is the way to go.
But since debt collectors know that I am collection proof, they usually don't bother trying to get a judgment against me, so in that sense, I guess you could say I am judgment proof.
My home is rented. I don't own any real estate. I don't intend to ever own any real estate. I like to be able to move around to get away from bad neighbors and stuff like that.
My only vehicle is currently worth less than $5,000 (according to the Kelly Blue Book) which is exempt under Arizona law. It's not new and pretty, but it gets me where I want to go.
I don't have a checking account. No savings account, no investments. Which also means no fees for bouncing checks, etc.
I use cash, money orders, and pre-paid Visa cards for everything. I find that I spend far less when I have to hand over cash to some cashier at a store or restaurant.
I do temp jobs that last for no more than a month or two at best. Most last less than one month. By the time they started garnishing wages, the job would be over, and I would be moving on to a different job. I get these jobs at a free job service which posts temporary job listings in my area. A lot of people aren't willing to work at temp jobs, but they are good money (as long as you live cheaply) and they give me flexibility to go on lots of vacations to places like Oregon (to visit relatives) whenever I feel like it. I'm not tied down to job. To be honest, I don't think I could handle a regular job that went on month after month, year after year. It would be horrible for someone like me.
The other things I do are self-employed things that are very difficult (and time consuming which is expensive for lawyers) for any creditor to figure out. I certainly would never volunteer this information to any creditor and I honestly don't know how they would ever figure it out. In the unlikely event that they did a judgment exam, my self employment could suddenly, easily, and voluntarily drop to zero, so they still wouldn't get anything. The kind of work I do requires just a few cheap tools (which are exempt under Arizona law), and no inventory. I just buy stuff at Home Depot when I need it for a job, rather than keep an inventory. Creditors would have nothing to seize.
I do not use credit for anything. I will not even apply for a job that checks my credit report. My credit report has no recent activity. That looks bad to a debt collector.
I understand that most people would not want to live this way, but for those who want to drop below creditor radar screens, this is the way to go.
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