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State Guide
Understanding Bankruptcy in New Hampshire
Filing for bankruptcy is a legal process governed by federal law, but New Hampshire-specific exemptions and court procedures determine how much of your property you keep. Thousands of New Hampshire residents file every year — approximately 2,200 annually — and the process, handled correctly, can stop creditor harassment immediately and give you a genuine fresh start.
This guide covers the two most common forms of consumer bankruptcy in New Hampshire, the key exemptions that protect your property, and the questions residents most often ask before speaking with an attorney.
Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
The two primary options for New Hampshire residents are Chapter 7 (liquidation) and Chapter 13 (reorganization). Choosing between them depends on your income, the type of debt you carry, and what property you want to protect.
Chapter 7 — Liquidation
- Eliminates most unsecured debt (credit cards, medical bills, personal loans)
- Process typically completes in 3–6 months
- No repayment plan — eligible debts are discharged
- Must pass the New Hampshire means test (income below state median)
- A trustee reviews non-exempt assets, but most filers lose nothing
- Automatic stay stops wage garnishment, foreclosure, and collection calls immediately upon filing
Chapter 13 — Reorganization
- Restructures debt into a 3–5 year repayment plan
- Lets you catch up on mortgage arrears and keep your home
- Available to filers whose income exceeds the Chapter 7 threshold
- Discharges remaining unsecured debt after the plan completes
- Can strip certain junior liens in some circumstances
- Requires stable income to fund the plan
New Hampshire Bankruptcy Exemptions
New Hampshire exemptions determine which assets a bankruptcy trustee cannot touch. Understanding these protections is critical before you file. The key exemptions under New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated §§ 480:1 through 480:9 are:
| Asset Type | New Hampshire Exemption Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Homestead (Primary Residence) | $200,000 | New Hampshire allows filers to choose between state and federal exemptions. The $10,000 vehicle exemption is among the highest in New England. |
| Motor Vehicle | $10,000 | Applies to equity above any secured loan balance |
| Retirement Accounts | Fully exempt (ERISA-qualified plans under federal law) | 401(k), 403(b), IRA, and pension accounts are protected under 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(3)(C) |
| Social Security & Disability | Fully exempt (federal law) | Protected under 42 U.S.C. § 407; must be kept in a separate bank account |
| Household Goods & Clothing | Varies — personal property exemption applies | Most everyday household items have little liquidation value and are rarely seized |
Means Test: New Hampshire has no state income tax, and median incomes are among the highest in the Northeast — verify Chapter 7 eligibility before filing. Under 11 U.S.C. § 707(b), current monthly income is compared to the state median for a household of your size. If your income exceeds the median, a further analysis of allowable expenses determines eligibility. An attorney can run this calculation for free before you decide to file.
What the Automatic Stay Stops Immediately
The moment a bankruptcy petition is filed in any of the District of New Hampshire, an automatic stay goes into effect under 11 U.S.C. § 362. This federal order immediately halts:
- Wage garnishment — your employer must stop taking money from your paycheck
- Bank account levies — creditors cannot withdraw funds from your accounts
- Foreclosure proceedings — buys time to either catch up or surrender the property on your own timeline
- Repossession — creditors cannot take your car without court approval
- Collection calls and letters — all direct contact from creditors must stop
- Civil lawsuits — pending collection suits are paused
- Utility shutoffs — utilities must maintain service for at least 20 days post-filing
Violating the automatic stay is a federal contempt matter. Creditors who continue collection activities after filing can be sanctioned by the bankruptcy court. An experienced New Hampshire bankruptcy attorney can help you enforce this protection if a creditor ignores the stay.
How New Hampshire Residents File
Bankruptcy cases in New Hampshire are filed in federal court — specifically in the District of New Hampshire. Key steps include:
- Credit counseling: Required within 180 days before filing (11 U.S.C. § 109(h)) — approved agencies are listed at justice.gov/ust
- Filing the petition: Your attorney prepares schedules of assets, liabilities, income, and expenses
- 341 meeting of creditors: A brief meeting (usually 5–10 minutes) with a trustee; creditors rarely attend
- Discharge: For Chapter 7, most debts are discharged 60–90 days after the 341 meeting
- Debtor education: A second financial management course is required before discharge
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions: Bankruptcy in New Hampshire
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Will I lose my home if I file bankruptcy in New Hampshire?Not necessarily. The New Hampshire homestead exemption protects up to $200,000 in home equity. If your equity is within that amount, your home is safe in Chapter 7. If your equity exceeds the exemption, Chapter 13 lets you keep the home by repaying creditors through a payment plan. An attorney can quickly calculate your equity position and tell you which path applies.
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Will bankruptcy stop wage garnishment in New Hampshire?Yes — immediately. The automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362 takes effect the moment your case is filed. Your employer is legally required to stop the garnishment upon receiving notice. If garnished wages are taken after filing, they may be recoverable as a violation of the automatic stay. This is one of the most time-sensitive reasons people file.
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How does bankruptcy affect my credit score in New Hampshire?A Chapter 7 bankruptcy remains on your credit report for 10 years; Chapter 13 stays for 7 years. However, many filers see their credit scores begin to recover within 12–18 months of discharge, especially if they open a secured credit card and make on-time payments. The long-term damage of unpaid debts, judgments, and garnishments is often worse than a bankruptcy filing.
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What debts can't be discharged in bankruptcy?Certain debts survive bankruptcy regardless of the chapter filed: most student loans (unless undue hardship is proven), recent tax debts (less than 3 years old), child support and alimony, criminal restitution, and debts incurred through fraud. Your attorney can identify which of your debts are non-dischargeable before you file.
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How much does it cost to file bankruptcy in New Hampshire?Court filing fees are $338 for Chapter 7 and $313 for Chapter 13 (as of 2025, per uscourts.gov). Attorney fees vary by complexity, but Chapter 7 representation typically ranges from $1,000–$2,500 in New Hampshire. Many attorneys offer payment plans, and the cost is almost always far less than the debt being eliminated.
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Can I keep my car if I file Chapter 7 in New Hampshire?In most cases, yes. The New Hampshire vehicle exemption protects $10,000 in vehicle equity. If you owe more on the car than it's worth (negative equity), there's nothing for the trustee to take. If you have equity above the exemption and want to keep the car, you may reaffirm the debt (continue paying as agreed) or redeem the vehicle by paying its current value in a lump sum.
Sources & References
- U.S. Courts — Bankruptcy Basics, Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts
- U.S. Trustee Program — Means Testing Information, U.S. Department of Justice
- American Bankruptcy Institute — Annual Bankruptcy Statistics, ABI
- Cornell Legal Information Institute — 11 U.S.C. § 362 — Automatic Stay
- Cornell Legal Information Institute — 11 U.S.C. § 522 — Exemptions
- New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated §§ 480:1 through 480:9 — New Hampshire State Exemption Statutes
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — Debt Collection Resources
- PACER — Public Access to Court Electronic Records, District of New Hampshire