Bankruptcy doesn't mean you're trapped in your home β or that you've lost it. Whether you can sell, when you can sell, and what happens to the proceeds depends entirely on which chapter you filed, how much equity you have, and whether your case is still active. The rules are different for every scenario, and getting them wrong can cost you your exemption or void the sale entirely.
The critical first question isn't whether you can sell β it's where you are in the bankruptcy process. Selling during an active case requires court approval and trustee involvement. Selling after discharge and case closure is straightforward. And selling before filing requires careful planning to protect your proceeds.
Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13
These two bankruptcy chapters handle your home completely differently. Understanding which you filed (or are considering filing) determines everything about your home sale.
The Homestead Exemption
The homestead exemption is the law that protects a certain amount of equity in your primary residence from being taken by creditors in bankruptcy. If your equity is fully covered by the exemption, the trustee won't sell your home. If your equity exceeds the exemption, the trustee may sell the home in Chapter 7, or you must pay the excess through your Chapter 13 repayment plan.
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Selling During Bankruptcy
Chapter 7 β The Trustee Decides
Once you file Chapter 7, a bankruptcy trustee is appointed to your case. The trustee's job is to determine whether any of your assets can be sold to pay creditors. If your home has non-exempt equity, the trustee will sell it β not you. The trustee hires a real estate broker (with court approval), lists the property, negotiates a price, notifies creditors of the opportunity to object, and gets a court order authorizing the sale. You receive your homestead exemption amount from the proceeds. If the home doesn't have enough equity to justify a sale after paying the mortgage, liens, sale costs, and trustee fees, the trustee will "abandon" the property β meaning it's yours to keep or sell after the case closes.
Chapter 13 β You Sell, But With Permission
During Chapter 13, you retain your assets but they're part of the bankruptcy estate managed by the trustee. To sell your home, your attorney must file a Motion to Sell with the bankruptcy court, including an appraisal or documentation of value and a proposal for distributing proceeds. Creditors must be notified and given the opportunity to object. If the court approves, the sale proceeds go to the bankruptcy estate, and the trustee distributes them according to your repayment plan. If the sale proceeds allow you to pay off your plan entirely, you could receive your discharge shortly after closing.
Selling After Bankruptcy
Once your bankruptcy is discharged and the case is officially closed, you regain full control of your property and can sell like any other homeowner. No court approval, no trustee involvement, no creditor notification.
Chapter 7 β Sell in 3-6 Months
Discharge typically comes 3-4 months after filing. The case may remain open briefly if the trustee is administering assets. Once discharged, closed, and the trustee has abandoned the property, you're free to sell. Confirm with your attorney that the property is clear. Some courts require reinvestment of proceeds into a new primary residence within 6 months if selling between discharge and case closure.
Chapter 13 β Sell After Plan Completion (3-5 Years)
Once you receive your Chapter 13 discharge (after completing the 3-5 year repayment plan), you're generally free to sell without bankruptcy court involvement. No additional waiting period. Your bankruptcy attorney should confirm all post-discharge actions comply with case closure requirements.
After Either Chapter β Clean Title Sale
Bankruptcy itself doesn't appear in the property's title β it shows on your credit report, not the deed. Buyers won't be affected. Title companies may ask for discharge paperwork during closing, but this is routine verification. Your sale price is based on the property's market value, not your financial history.
Mortgage Waiting Periods
If you're selling your current home and need to buy another, the waiting period to qualify for a new mortgage depends on the loan type and which bankruptcy chapter you filed. FHA loans offer the shortest path back to homeownership.
| Loan Type | After Chapter 7 | After Chapter 13 | Extenuating Circumstances |
|---|---|---|---|
| FHA | 2 years from discharge | 1 year of on-time payments (can buy during plan); no wait after discharge | May reduce Ch7 to 1 year |
| VA | 2 years from discharge | 1 year of on-time payments + court permission | Case-by-case review |
| USDA | 3 years from discharge | 1 year of on-time payments | May reduce Ch7 to 1 year |
| Conventional | 4 years from discharge | 2 years from discharge (4 years if dismissed) | May reduce Ch7 to 2 years |
Credit rebuilding requirements: Meeting the waiting period isn't enough β you also need to rebuild credit. Lenders want to see re-established good credit since filing, no new delinquencies, a letter of explanation detailing what caused the bankruptcy and what changed, stable employment history, and a debt-to-income ratio that supports the new mortgage. Minimum FICO scores: 580 for FHA (3.5% down), 500-579 for FHA (10% down), typically 620+ for conventional loans.
4 Selling Strategies
1. Wait Until After Discharge, Then List
If you can wait until your case is discharged and closed, you sell as a regular homeowner β no court approval, no trustee, full control of the process and proceeds (after paying any mortgage). This is the simplest and highest-return option.
Best for: Chapter 7 filers whose equity is fully exempt (trustee will abandon the property). Chapter 13 filers who have completed their plan. Anyone who doesn't need to sell urgently. Timeline: 3-6 months post-filing for Chapter 7, 3-5 years for Chapter 13.
2. Sell During Chapter 13 With Court Approval
Your attorney files a Motion to Sell, the court reviews and approves, and you sell with the proceeds going to the bankruptcy estate. If proceeds are enough to pay off your remaining plan balance, you could receive early discharge.
Best for: Chapter 13 filers who need to relocate, whose home has appreciated significantly, or who want to pay off their plan early. Requires an attorney experienced in bankruptcy real estate transactions. Set your closing date after the court hearing to avoid complications.
3. Dismiss Chapter 13, Sell, Then Refile
Dismiss your Chapter 13 case, sell the home freely without court involvement, then refile if needed. This gives you full control of the sale but has consequences: dismissal (not discharge) means a 4-year conventional mortgage wait vs. 2 years for discharge. Creditors' collection rights resume upon dismissal. Refiling within 1 year may result in a shorter automatic stay.
Best for: Situations where court approval is unlikely or the trustee/creditors are likely to object. Consult your bankruptcy attorney carefully β this is a strategic decision with significant trade-offs.
4. Sell Directly β Cash Buyer, Any Situation
We purchase homes from owners in all bankruptcy situations β active Chapter 7 or 13 (with proper court approval), post-discharge, or pre-filing. Cash offer, no financing contingencies, flexible closing timeline that works with your court schedule.
Why this works for bankruptcy situations: Cash buyers don't need mortgage approval, so there's no risk of a buyer's financing falling through. Quick, certain closings work with court timelines. We handle the complexity of working with your attorney and the trustee's requirements. No repairs, no staging, no carrying costs while waiting for a traditional sale. Complete fast-sale guide β
Selling Before Filing
If you're considering bankruptcy and want to sell your home first, timing matters. Selling before filing lets you control the process, but the proceeds need protection. If you sell and deposit the money into a bank account, a Chapter 7 trustee could claim it β bank account exemptions are often minimal ($500 or less in some states).
Frequently Asked
Yes, but the process depends on the chapter. Chapter 7: the trustee controls the sale of non-exempt assets. If equity is fully exempt, wait for the trustee to abandon the property (case closure, typically 3-6 months). Chapter 13: you can sell with court approval β your attorney files a Motion to Sell, creditors are notified, and the court must approve before closing. Never sell without your bankruptcy attorney's guidance β unauthorized sales can be voided.
The homestead exemption protects a specific amount of your home equity from creditors in bankruptcy. Federal exemption: $31,575 (2025-2028, doubled for married couples). State exemptions vary from $10,000 to unlimited (Texas, Florida). You choose federal or state β can't mix. The 40-month rule caps exemptions at $214,000 for homes purchased less than 40 months before filing. If your equity exceeds the exemption, the Chapter 7 trustee may sell your home; in Chapter 13, you pay the excess through your plan.
Typically 3-6 months after filing, once your case is discharged, officially closed, and the trustee has formally abandoned the property. All three conditions must be met. After that, you sell exactly like any other homeowner β no court approval needed. Title companies may request discharge paperwork, but this is routine. Confirm with your bankruptcy attorney before listing.
After Chapter 7: FHA 2 years, VA 2 years, USDA 3 years, conventional 4 years from discharge date. After Chapter 13: FHA/VA/USDA allow applications after just 12 months of on-time plan payments (with court permission); conventional requires 2 years after discharge. Extenuating circumstances (medical emergency, death of breadwinner) may reduce FHA Chapter 7 wait to 12 months. Minimum credit scores: 580 for FHA (3.5% down), 620+ for conventional.
Not directly. Your property is worth what it's worth regardless of your financial situation. Bankruptcy doesn't appear on the property's title or affect the buyer's transaction. However, trustee sales in Chapter 7 may be below market due to liquidation pressure, and court approval timelines in Chapter 13 can limit buyer interest. After discharge, selling independently, there's no impact on price β only on your credit and ability to buy your next home.
Federal homestead exemption amounts ($31,575 individual, $63,150 joint, valid April 2025-March 2028) and 40-month/$214,000 cap from 11 U.S.C. Β§ 522(d)(1), (p), and (q) per Nolo's 2026 bankruptcy exemption guides (updated January 2026). Chapter 7 trustee sale procedures, property abandonment timelines (3-6 months), and creditor notification requirements from Nolo ("How Does the Bankruptcy Trustee Sell My Home?" May 2024). Chapter 13 Motion to Sell requirements, court approval process, and proceed distribution from Allmand Law (October 2025), Cleveland Bankruptcy Attorneys, and the Chapter 13 Chattanooga trustee office. State homestead exemption variations (Texas/Florida unlimited, California $361K-$722K+) and 730-day domicile rule from Upsolve (updated January 2026), Justia Bankruptcy Law Center (October 2025), and Nolo state-specific guides. Mortgage waiting periods: FHA Chapter 7 (2 years from discharge, 1 year extenuating) and Chapter 13 (1 year of on-time payments) from FHA.com (May 2025, December 2025), HUD Handbook 4000.1, Neighbors Bank, LendingTree (August 2025), and People's Bank Mortgage (August 2025). VA waiting periods from VA Lenders Handbook M26-7 Topic 7(b) (2025). USDA waiting periods from 7 C.F.R. Β§ 3555.151 (2025) per Nolo (May 2025). Conventional loan waiting periods (4 years Ch7, 2 years Ch13 discharge, 4 years Ch13 dismissed) from The Mortgage Reports (January 2026) and Nationwide Mortgage & Realty (February 2025). Chapter 13 dismissal vs. discharge implications from JVM Lending (April 2024) and multiple bankruptcy attorney sources. Over 500,000 annual bankruptcy filings per United States Courts data (September 2023-September 2024). This guide is educational β consult a licensed bankruptcy attorney for advice on your specific situation.