Somewhere in the middle of almost every Chapter 7 case, a piece of paper shows up that catches filers off guard. The car lender sends over a reaffirmation agreement and asks you to sign it. The form looks routine, and the lender may make it sound like a formality for keeping your vehicle. It is not a formality. A reaffirmation agreement is one of the few documents in bankruptcy that can undo part of your fresh start, and the decision to sign deserves real thought.
This guide explains what a reaffirmation agreement actually does, how the process works in a Utah bankruptcy case, when signing can genuinely help you, and when it quietly puts you back on the hook for debt your discharge would have erased.
A bankruptcy discharge wipes out your personal liability on most debts. A reaffirmation agreement is a voluntary contract, governed by 11 U.S.C. Section 524(c), in which you agree to remain personally liable on a specific debt despite the discharge. In practice, you are pulling one debt back out of the bankruptcy and promising to keep paying it as if the case never happened.
Reaffirmation comes up almost exclusively in Chapter 7 cases, and almost always with secured debts like car loans. The lender’s lien on your vehicle survives bankruptcy either way. What the reaffirmation changes is your personal responsibility for the loan. If you reaffirm and later default, the lender can repossess the vehicle and also pursue you for the deficiency balance, garnish wages, and sue, exactly as if you had never filed. If you do not reaffirm and later default, the lender can take the vehicle but generally cannot come after you personally for the shortfall.
Reaffirmation follows a defined timeline with several built-in protections.
One extra layer applies to filers without a lawyer. If you were not represented during the negotiation, the court must hold a hearing and approve the agreement as being in your best interest, although that approval requirement does not apply to debts secured by real estate under Section 524(c)(6).
Signing a reaffirmation agreement is not the point of no return. Federal law lets you rescind the agreement any time before your discharge is entered, or within 60 days after the agreement is filed with the court, whichever gives you more time. Cancelling restores the debt to its ordinary place in your bankruptcy. If you signed under pressure and are having second thoughts, the window to act is real but limited.
Reaffirmation is not always a mistake. In the right circumstances it can be a reasonable trade.
The credit reporting point deserves a brief explanation. After a discharge, many lenders stop reporting payment activity on loans that were not reaffirmed, since there is no longer a personal obligation to report. A reaffirmed loan usually keeps reporting, which can modestly help the credit rebuilding process. That benefit is real but small, and it almost never outweighs reaffirming an unaffordable or deeply underwater loan.
Here is the scenario that makes bankruptcy attorneys cautious. You reaffirm a $14,000 loan on a car worth $9,000 because you need the car for work. A year later the transmission fails, or your hours get cut, and the payments stop. The lender repossesses the car, sells it at auction for $6,000, and sues you for the remaining balance plus repossession and sale costs. Because you reaffirmed, your discharge does not protect you from that lawsuit, and you cannot receive another Chapter 7 discharge for eight years from your prior filing date under 11 U.S.C. Section 727(a)(8). You end up with no car and a fresh judgment.
Without the reaffirmation, the same default would have ended with the repossession alone. That difference is the entire decision in a nutshell.
Reaffirmation is one of several ways to handle a secured debt in bankruptcy, and it is rarely the only path to keeping your property.
Utah’s exemption rules also shape these choices. An individual filer can protect up to $3,000 of equity in one motor vehicle under Utah Code Section 78B-5-506(3), which matters most when deciding whether a vehicle with equity is worth keeping. And if the loan in question is a title loan rather than a purchase loan, the analysis changes again, as we covered in our guide to payday and title loans in Utah.
The reaffirmation decision comes down to a handful of honest questions. Is the payment truly affordable on your post-bankruptcy budget? Is the collateral worth what you owe? Is the property reliable enough to outlast the loan? Would one of the alternatives leave you in a stronger position? A lender pushing a form across the table will not walk through those questions with you. Your attorney will, and the attorney certification requirement exists precisely because Congress wanted a professional judgment standing between filers and unaffordable reaffirmations.
At Blue Bee Bankruptcy Law, our attorneys review every proposed reaffirmation against your actual budget and the property’s actual value, and we tell you plainly when signing would work against you. If you are heading into bankruptcy with a car loan or have already received a reaffirmation agreement, call (801) 285-0980 for a free consultation before you sign anything.
A reaffirmation agreement is a voluntary contract under 11 U.S.C. Section 524(c) in which you agree to remain personally liable on a specific debt even though your bankruptcy discharge would otherwise eliminate that liability. The debt survives your bankruptcy as if you had never filed.
Not always. Some lenders will continue accepting payments without a reaffirmation as long as the loan stays current, while others insist on a signed agreement. Whether reaffirming is truly necessary depends on the lender and the loan documents, which is a question to review with your attorney rather than take the lender’s word for.
Yes. If your monthly income minus expenses leaves less than the reaffirmed payment, federal law presumes the agreement is an undue hardship, and the court can disapprove it unless you explain where the money will come from. Unrepresented filers also need court approval finding the agreement is in their best interest, except for real estate debts.
Yes. You can rescind the agreement at any time before your discharge is entered, or within 60 days after the agreement is filed with the court, whichever is later. You cancel by giving notice to the creditor. After the window closes, the reaffirmed debt is enforceable.
The lender can repossess the collateral and pursue you personally for any remaining balance, including through a lawsuit and wage garnishment. Your earlier discharge does not protect you from a reaffirmed debt, and you generally must wait eight years between Chapter 7 discharges.
Mortgage reaffirmation is rarely necessary and often unwise. In most cases you can keep your home by simply staying current on payments, because the lender’s lien survives bankruptcy and gives it the right to foreclose only if you default. Reaffirming adds back personal liability for the full loan with little practical benefit. This is a decision to make only with attorney guidance.
It can help modestly. Reaffirmed loans usually continue reporting your payment history to the credit bureaus, while many lenders stop reporting on discharged loans you keep paying informally. The benefit is real but small compared to the risk of reaffirming an unaffordable or underwater loan, and there are safer ways to rebuild credit after a discharge.
Redemption under 11 U.S.C. Section 722 lets you keep certain personal property by paying the lender the property’s current market value in one lump sum, regardless of the loan balance. Unlike reaffirmation, redemption can cut thousands off an underwater loan, but it requires coming up with the payment at once.
Under Bankruptcy Rule 4008, a reaffirmation agreement generally must be filed no later than 60 days after the first date set for your meeting of creditors, although the court has discretion to extend that deadline. The agreement must also be filed before your discharge is entered to be effective.
Reaffirmation is essentially a Chapter 7 concept. In a Chapter 13 case, secured debts like car loans are handled through the repayment plan itself, which can restructure the loan terms directly. If keeping a vehicle on better terms is your main goal, a Chapter 13 plan is sometimes the stronger tool.