Time Between Discharges - Bankruptcy Filing Interval Rules

Complete guide to discharge-to-discharge timing rules. 8 years, 6 years, 4 years, and 2 years depending on chapter combination. Section 727 and 1328(f) explained.

Filing Intervals at a Glance

How long you must wait between bankruptcy filings depends on which chapters you file:

Previous FilingNew FilingWait PeriodStatute
Chapter 7Chapter 78 years11 U.S.C. 727(a)(8)
Chapter 7Chapter 134 years11 U.S.C. 1328(f)(1)
Chapter 13Chapter 76 years (unless paid 100% or 70%+ in good faith)11 U.S.C. 727(a)(9)
Chapter 13Chapter 132 years11 U.S.C. 1328(f)(2)

Important: These periods run from the filing date of the prior case to the filing date of the new case, NOT from discharge date. However, you cannot receive a discharge in the new case until the applicable period from the prior discharge date has passed.

Chapter 20 Strategy

A "Chapter 20" is not an official chapter - it is the strategy of filing Chapter 7 first (to eliminate unsecured debt) and then Chapter 13 (to deal with secured debt like a mortgage). This is legal but has important limitations:

Check Your Eligibility

Use the free 1328(f) Discharge Screener to check whether you are eligible for a new bankruptcy discharge based on your prior filing dates.

Our research was cited by the federal judiciary as Suggestions 26-BK-3 and 26-BK-5