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BAPCPA Report - 2020

2020 Report of Statistics Required by the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005.

Introduction

Under 28 U.S.C. § 159(b), enacted as part of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA), the Director of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts (AO) is required to submit an annual report to Congress on certain bankruptcy statistics detailed in 28 U.S.C.§ 159(c). Section 159(a) provides that clerks of the bankruptcy courts “shall collect statistics regarding debtors who are individuals with primarily consumer debts seeking relief under chapters 7, 11, and 13 of title 11.” The Director of the AO is required to compile this information, analyze it, and make it accessible to the public as well as Congress. This report is prepared to fulfill the statutory requirement. Tables in the report display data nationally, by circuit, and by district.

Summary of Findings

During calendar year 2020, bankruptcy filings in the U.S. courts were lower as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. More than 507,000 bankruptcy petitions were filed by individuals with debts that were predominantly consumer in nature (“consumer cases”), a 31 percent decrease from the 734,000 consumer petitions filed in 2019. Approximately 70 percent of the petitions were filed under chapter 7, in which a debtor’s nonexempt assets are liquidated and the proceeds distributed to creditors. About 30 percent were filed under chapter 13, in which individuals with regular income and who have debts below a statutory threshold make installment payments to creditors under court-confirmed plans. One-tenth of 1 percent of petitions filed by individuals with predominantly consumer debt were filed under chapter 11, which allows businesses and individuals to continue operating while they formulate plans to reorganize and repay their creditors.1

Approximately 658,000 consumer cases were closed during calendar year 2020. Sixty-five percent of the closed consumer cases had been filed under chapter 7, about 34 percent under chapter 13, and about one-tenth of 1 percent under chapter 11.

Consumer debtors seeking bankruptcy protection under chapters 7, 11, or 13 during 2020 reported holding total assets of $47 billion and total liabilities of $148 billion. Total assets reported by consumer debtors dropped 44 percent from 2019. Total liabilities for the same set of debtors increased 31 percent from 2019. The growth in liabilities in 2020 was primarily due to several debtors who reported large secured claim amounts outpacing amounts in 2019.

The median average monthly income reported by all debtors was $2,922 (two percent lower than in 2019), and the median average reported monthly expenses were $2,856 (one percent higher than in 2019)2. From filing to closing, chapter 7 consumer cases terminated in 2020 had a mean time interval of 195 days and a median time interval of 117 days. A total of 134,984 reaffirmation agreements were reported as filed in 95,783 chapter 7 consumer cases terminated during 2020. In 38 percent of the chapter 13 cases filed during 2020, debtors reported that they had filed for bankruptcy protection during the previous eight years, one percent lower than chapter 13 cases filed during 2019.

Tables

In accordance with BAPCPA, the bankruptcy statistics in this report are itemized by chapter of Title 11 of the United States Code (the Bankruptcy Code) and report only data in consumer cases. The tables noted in the list below have been created for this report as specified in 28 U.S.C. § 159(c).

BAPCPA Report Tables

Code

Description

BAPCPA Table

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(A) & 28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(C)

Assets and Liabilities Reported by Debtors and Debts Discharged

1

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(B)

Income and Expenses Reported by Debtors

2

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(D)

Time Interval from Filing to Closing

3

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(E)

Reaffirmation Agreements

4

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(F)(i)

Property Valuation Orders

5

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(F)(ii)

Chapter 13 Cases Closed by Dismissal or Plan Completion and Plan Modifications

6

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(F)(iii)

Prior/No Prior Filings Reported by Debtors

7

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(G)

Creditor Misconduct and Punitive Damages

8

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(H)

Rule 9011 Sanctions Imposed Against Debtors’ Attorneys and Damages Awarded

9

The naming convention used for the tables in this report provides that the alphabetic character immediately following the table number indicates the chapter(s) of the Bankruptcy Code associated with the cases included in the table. “A” indicates cases under chapter 7 only; “B” indicates cases under chapter 11 only; “D” indicates cases under chapter 13 only; and “X” indicates cases under chapters 7, 11, and 13 combined. For example, Table 1D reports assets and liabilities for cases filed under chapter 13.3

Methodology and Data Limitations

Debtor-Provided Data

The U.S. bankruptcy courts send data to the AO when a case is filed, when certain motions are filed in the case, and when the case is closed. The data are then compiled annually for the purpose of this report. Many BAPCPA tables, particularly those reporting data on debtors’ assets, liabilities, income, and expenses, rely on data provided by debtors when they submit required forms, schedules, motions, agreements, and other filings to the court. Most of these data, as specified in 28 U.S.C. § 159(c), are provided exclusively by debtors and are not validated either by the courts or the AO.

With respect to data collected from forms and schedules submitted at filing, debtors may fail to provide some or all of the data required for the BAPCPA tables. Therefore, analyses involving two or more columns in any table may overstate or understate differences. When all required data from a debtor are missing, either because of omission or delayed submission, analyses involving the data and the number of cases become unreliable. Therefore, caution should be used when analyzing columns of data or comparing any column of data to the number of cases filed.

Reliance on debtor-provided data may introduce other sources of error. One likely source of error arises when a debtor inaccurately reports assets, liabilities, income, or expenses at the time of filing. Those inaccuracies, if significant enough, may affect district, circuit, and national totals for the relevant fields in the tables in this report.

Data on Cases Filed and Closed

Another limitation relates to the first column of data in each table, which presents total cases. Some tables include reopened and transferred cases in the totals, but others omit these cases. Reopened and transferred cases are excluded when the data would be duplicative. For example, totals for assets and liabilities at the original filing of a case are the same for each reopening of that case. Counting the cases twice (once at filing and once at reopening) would distort the data on reported assets, liabilities, income, and expenses. In all other instances in which the duplication would not affect the results, these cases are included.

Transaction Data

Transaction data include reports of case-related events such as reaffirmation agreements, valuation orders, creditor misconduct, and attorney sanctions that occur during bankruptcy proceedings (see Tables 4, 5, 8, and 9). Such data are typically captured in the courts’ docketing activity.

In many instances, BAPCPA requires a report of the total number of cases in which a specific type of transaction has occurred. This affects the way that transaction data are reported. A case may have more than one occurrence of a particular type of transaction. For this reason, the case must be concluded before the AO can report whether the case meets the requirement to be counted and to ensure that no case is counted more than once. Thus, tables based on transaction data are based only on data from cases closed during the reporting period. These tables are subject to the same limitations noted in the section on cases filed and closed.

In addition, because a case may have more than one occurrence of a specific type of transaction, but the characteristics of each transaction may be different, the case must be counted in each column of a table whenever any occurrence meets the criteria for data in that column. If, for example, a debtor enters into three reaffirmation agreements, two of which include certification from the debtor’s attorney and one of which does not, the case is counted in the column representing “number of cases with agreements filed pro se” as well as the column representing the “total number of cases with agreements filed.” Furthermore, if, in the example above, the court approves one reaffirmation agreement and denies the other two, the case is also counted in the column representing the “number of cases with agreements approved.”

Because transaction data are captured from docket activity, the collection of accurate transaction data relies on debtors, their attorneys, and other case parties who file motions, agreements, and other documents with the courts to identify them appropriately. If a filer fails to note the correct court event at docketing, the data may not be reported accurately or at all. If the filer submits multiple matters under a single court event, the activities may be undercounted or not counted at all.

Assets and Liabilities Reported by Debtors

Tables 1A, 1B, 1D, and 1X set forth the assets and liabilities reported by debtors in total and by category of assets and liabilities, as well as the total net scheduled debt reported by the debtors on Official Bankruptcy Form 106Sum—Summary of Your Assets and Liabilities and Certain Statistical Information (B 106 Summary). All tables that report assets and liabilities (1A, 1B, 1D, and 1X) present data on cases filed during the reporting period by individual debtors with primarily consumer debt. The data for these tables are provided exclusively by the debtors and cannot be validated by the courts. These data typically are provided by a debtor at the time of filing or within 14 days thereafter as required by Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure (Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1007). They are not typically updated as the case proceeds. Data for reopened and transferred cases are excluded to prevent duplicate reporting.

“Net scheduled debt” is defined as the total amount of debt and obligations of a debtor reported on the schedules reduced by the amount of such debt reported in categories that are predominantly non-dischargeable. Debt that is predominantly non-dischargeable may include, but is not limited to, domestic support obligations, taxes, student loans, and pension obligations. Thus, net scheduled debt approximates the amount of debt reported by the debtor at the time of filing that may be eligible for discharge (without regard to security interests) during the case and is referred to in 28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(C) as the “aggregate amount of debt discharged in cases filed during the reporting period.”

“Net scheduled debt,” however, overstates the amount of debt actually discharged by the amount of secured debt (e.g., mortgages on real property and many car loans) that remains after the discharge. A discharge in bankruptcy releases the debtor from personal liability for certain specified types of debts. Although a debtor is not personally liable for discharged debts, a valid lien secured by property that has not been voided in the bankruptcy case will remain in effect as to that secured property after the bankruptcy case has been closed. Therefore, unless the debtor continues repaying the discharged debt, a secured creditor may enforce the lien to recover the property that secures payment of the debt. In determining dischargeable debt, the statute does not provide for a reduction in either real or personal property valuations by the claims of creditors secured by such property.

Table 1X shows that individual debtors with primarily consumer debt seeking bankruptcy protection under chapters 7, 11, or 13 during 2020 reported holding total assets in the aggregate amount of $47 billion. Sixty-nine percent of these assets were categorized as real property, and 31 percent as personal property. Apart from districts with fewer than 200 case filings each (the Districts of the Northern Mariana Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Guam), debtors in the Northern District of California (CA-N) and the District of Massachusetts reported the highest average assets per petition at $186,000 and $178,700, respectively. Filers in the Western District of Tennessee (TN-W) reported the lowest average assets at $45,000.

Debtors reported total liabilities in the aggregate amount of $148 billion, with 72 percent of liabilities categorized as secured claims, 1 percent as unsecured priority claims, and 27 percent as unsecured non-priority claims. Overall, debtors categorized 95 percent of debts and obligations as dischargeable debt. Excluding districts with fewer than 200 case filings each, debtors in the District of Colorado (CO) and the Eastern District of Virginia (VA-E) reported the highest average liabilities per filed petition at $9,364,124 and $926,842, respectively. Filers in three cases reported unusually high liability amounts of $70,556,925,034 and $14,743,120,000 in CO and $8,773,665,488 in VA-E. Filers in TN-W had the lowest average liabilities at $74,000.

Income and Expenses Reported by Debtors

Tables 2A, 2B, 2D, and 2X present data on the income and expenses as reported by debtors on Official Bankruptcy Form 106Sum—Summary of Your Assets and Liabilities and Certain Statistical Information (B 106 Summary). Current monthly income data reflect income from all sources. Average monthly income data reflect total income for the last full six months prior to the bankruptcy filing, divided by six. The data for these tables are provided exclusively by the debtors and are not validated by the courts. A debtor typically provides the data at the time of filing or within 14 days of filing as required by Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 1007. Only data provided during the initial filing of each case are counted in Tables 2A-2X. Data for reopened and transferred cases are excluded to prevent duplicate reporting. Median values are calculated only when 10 or more cases are reported.4

Table 2X shows that 507,313 consumer cases were filed in 2020 under chapters 7, 11, and 13 across the nation and that 476,418 debtors completed the forms needed to include their data in these tables.5 The median current monthly income6 of debtors who completed the relevant forms was $3,188, a 2 percent decrease from the $3,261 median current monthly income reported in 2019. The median average monthly income7 was $2,922, a 2 percent decrease from 2019, and the median average expenses8 were $2,856, an increase of nearly 1 percent from 2019. The District of Alaska (AK) had the highest median current monthly income with $4,663, and the District of Puerto Rico (PR) had the lowest median current monthly income with $1,566. Filers in AK had the highest median average monthly income with $3,804, and filers in PR had the lowest median average monthly income with $1,860. Filers in AK had the highest median average expenses with $3,819, and filers in PR had the lowest with $1,759.

Time Interval from Case Filing to Closing

In accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(D), Table 3 reports the mean time interval between case filing and closing of consumer cases filed under chapters 7, 11, and 13 and terminated during 2020.9 The median time interval also has been included to provide perspective on the mean value by reducing the effect of data outliers, although median values are calculated only when 10 or more cases are reported.10 Reopened cases are excluded from this table because most reopened cases are filed and closed relatively quickly to settle administrative matters and do not proceed in the same way as original filings.11 For transferred cases, the mean and median time intervals are calculated from the date the case is received at the new location to the closing of the case at that location.

During the 12-month period ending December 31, 2020, a total of 642,787 consumer cases were closed under chapters 7, 11, and 13, with a mean time interval from filing to closing of 517 days and a median time interval of 143 days. The higher mean closing time (relative to the median time) reflects particularly long-running cases (e.g., chapter 13 cases). The mean time is 3.5 percent higher than for 2019, and the median time is 5 percent higher than for 2019.

Of the 418,830 chapter 7 consumer cases closed in 2020, the mean time interval from filing to closing was 195 days (up from 186 days in 2019), and the median time interval was 117 days (up from 114 days in 2019). The Middle District of Louisiana had the highest median of any district at 315 days, and the Southern District of California (CA-S) had the lowest median at 97 days.

A total of 687 chapter 11 consumer cases were closed in 66 districts during 2020. The mean time interval from filing to closing was 887 days (up from 748 days in 2019), and the median time interval was 598 days (up from 534 days in 2019). Only 20 districts had 10 or more chapter 11 cases closed in 2020. Of those districts, CA-S had the highest median at 1,968 days, and CA-N had the lowest median at 387 days.

A total of 223,270 chapter 13 consumer cases were closed during 2020. The mean time interval from filing to closing was 1,120 days (up from 1,031 days in 2019), and the median time interval was 1,185 days (up from 976 days in 2019). The District of Vermont (VT) had the highest median at 1,967 days, and Eastern District of New York had the lowest median at 154 days. However, the median and mean do not accurately convey the time required for a typical chapter 13 case; rather, they are proxies for the percent of chapter 13 cases closed by plan completion, as completion of the plan typically takes much longer than dismissal.12

Reaffirmation Agreements

A debtor may enter into a reaffirmation agreement with a creditor to continue paying a dischargeable debt following bankruptcy. This may occur when, for example, a debtor wants to keep an automobile and continue making payments on it. If an attorney represents the debtor during the bankruptcy, the debtor’s attorney may or may not represent the debtor during negotiation of a reaffirmation agreement. For purposes of this report, a reaffirmation agreement is considered “pro se” if it was submitted without the certification of an attorney contained in Part IV of Director’s Bankruptcy Form 2400A—Reaffirmation Documents (Form B2400A) or Part C of Director’s Bankruptcy Form 2400A/B—Reaffirmation Agreement (Form B2400A/B ALT), regardless of whether the debtor was otherwise represented in the case by an attorney.

Table 4 reports only on reaffirmation agreements filed in cases under chapter 7.13 Varying local practices govern the procedures for approving and denying reaffirmation agreements filed with the courts. In many districts, the court does not issue orders with respect to reaffirmation agreements filed with certification by debtors’ attorneys. In these instances, the reaffirmation agreement between the debtor and creditor is implicitly accepted without further court action and may or may not be recorded or otherwise noted in court documentation of the case. As a result, the difference between the number of reaffirmation agreements filed and the number of reaffirmation agreements approved does not represent the number of reaffirmation agreements denied. Moreover, sometimes multiple reaffirmation agreements are submitted together, some with and others without attorney certification, and a court order may fail to specify decisions of the court on the individual reaffirmation agreements. For these reasons, the data reported for approved reaffirmation agreements may not be representative of the total number of valid reaffirmation agreements executed by the parties.

As Table 4 illustrates, a total of 134,984 reaffirmation agreements were reported as filed in 430,167 chapter 7 consumer cases closed during the 12-month period ending December 31, 2020. The Middle District of Florida had the highest total number of cases in which reaffirmation agreements were filed (5,552), followed by the Northern District of Illinois (IL-N) with 4,970. Nationwide, 22 percent of chapter 7 cases closed had at least one reaffirmation agreement filed, down less than 1 percentage point from 2019. The Central District of Illinois reported the highest percentage of cases closed that had at least one reaffirmation agreement filed (43 percent). In 9 percent of cases with reaffirmation agreements filed, one or more agreements were submitted without attorney certification (pro se). The District of Kansas (KS) had the highest number of cases in which at least one pro se reaffirmation agreement was filed (933 cases). At least one pro se reaffirmation agreement was filed in 2 percent of chapter 7 cases closed. The Middle District of Alabama (33 percent of cases) and KS (29 percent) had the highest percentage of chapter 7 cases closed in which one or more pro se reaffirmation agreements were filed.

Less than one-tenth of one percent of cases in which a reaffirmation agreement was filed had at least one reaffirmation agreement approved by order of the court. However, as described above, this does not indicate that reaffirmation agreements were denied in 99 percent of the cases. In 2020, the District of Montana (MT) reported the highest percentage of cases in which at least one reaffirmation agreement had been approved (12 percent), followed by AK (1 percent) and the Southern District of Illinois (1 percent). These three districts accounted for 14 percent of the cases in which at least one reaffirmation agreement was approved.

Property Valuation Orders

In some cases, motions are made to the court to determine the value of property securing an allowed claim under 11 U.S.C. § 506 and 1325 and Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 3012. Table 5 shows the number of cases closed in 2020 in which final orders were entered determining the value of property securing a claim in an amount less than the amount of the claim, as well as the number of final orders entered determining the value of property securing a claim. Additional columns of data were added to provide further perspective on the required data.

A total of 226,910 chapter 13 consumer cases were closed in 2020. Final orders determining the value of property securing a claim were entered in 11,095 of the cases. In 7,413 cases, the value of property was reported in one or more final orders; in 4,762 (64 percent) of those cases, at least one final order valued the property at less than the full amount of the claim.

A case may have more than one final order determining the value of property securing a claim. In total, 15,057 final orders were entered in the 11,095 cases. Determinations of the value of property were reported in 10,753 final orders, of which 6,689 (62 percent) were valued below the amount of the claim. The Southern District of Florida (FL-S) reported that 1,857 final orders had been entered determining the value of property securing a claim, the highest total of any district. Forty-nine percent of the final orders determining the value of property securing a claim (7,317 final orders) were entered in five districts (FL-S, TN-W, IL-N, the Middle District of Tennessee, and the District of South Carolina); 34 districts reported no final orders determining the value of property securing a claim.

Chapter 13 Cases Closed by Dismissal or Plan Completion14

Table 6 shows the number of cases in which plans were completed in chapter 13 consumer cases, separately itemized by the number of modifications made to the plans. Table 6 also reports the number of chapter 13 consumer cases dismissed, the number dismissed for failure to make payments under the plan, and the number refiled after dismissal. For purposes of this table, a chapter 13 consumer case is counted as “refiled after dismissal” if the case was filed during the reporting period by one or more debtors who were party to a separate chapter 13 consumer case that was dismissed no more than 180 days prior to the filing date of the current case. Cases that are reopened are not included in the total for cases refiled after dismissal.

A total of 226,777 chapter 13 consumer cases were closed by dismissal or plan completion in 2020. Table 6 illustrates that 116,145 of these cases were dismissed. In 49 percent of the cases closed (110,632 cases), the debtors received a discharge after completing repayment plans, up from 43 percent in 2019. Among districts with at least 10 closed cases, VT had the highest percentage of cases (83 percent) closed by plan completion, followed by KS and the District of South Dakota (73 percent each). Of the 110,632 chapter 13 consumer cases in which debtors completed repayment plans, 25,188 (23 percent) had plans that were modified at least once prior to plan completion, unchanged from 2019.

Nationwide, failure to make plan payments was cited in 53 percent of cases as the reason for dismissal, an increase of 3 percent from 2019. Among districts with at least 10 closed cases, the Eastern District of North Carolina had the greatest percentage of dismissals (86 percent) that were for failure to make payments. MT had the lowest percentage of its dismissals made for failure to make payments (9 percent), followed by the Central District of California (15 percent). Table 6 shows that 11,072 cases were refiled after dismissal, less than half of the cases refiled in 2019 (22,895).

Prior Filings Reported by Debtors

Table 7 reports the number of cases in which individual debtors with primarily consumer debts filed for protection under chapter 13 during the reporting period and stated on Official Bankruptcy Form 101—Voluntary Petition for Individuals Filing for Bankruptcy (Form B101) that they previously had filed a case under any chapter of the Bankruptcy Code during the preceding eight years (“prior filings”). For this table, data are captured at the time of filing, and only data on the initial filing of each case are counted. Data on reopened cases are excluded to prevent duplicate reporting. The data for Table 7 are provided exclusively by the debtors and are subject to the limitations described in the section above on debtor-provided data.

In 38 percent of the 151,569 chapter 13 cases filed in 2020, debtors stated in 57,708 petitions that they had filed a bankruptcy petition during the previous eight years. In the remaining 93,861 cases, debtors stated that they had not filed for bankruptcy during the previous eight years. In 2020, the District of Utah recorded the highest percentage of cases with prior filings at 56 percent, followed by TN-W (55 percent). The districts with the lowest percentage of cases in which debtors indicated prior filings were VT (9 percent of cases) and AK (11 percent).

Creditor Misconduct and Punitive Damages

28 U.S.C. § 159(c)(3)(G) requires the Director of the AO to report on “the number of cases in which creditors were fined for misconduct and any amount of punitive damages awarded by the court for creditor misconduct.” Creditor misconduct, however, is not a specific cause of action under the Bankruptcy Code. At least five violations of the Bankruptcy Code could be considered creditor misconduct:

At least six other activities related to litigation procedures could also be considered creditor misconduct under certain circumstances:

What may be reported as creditor misconduct in one district may not be reported in another. In addition, because a creditor may be reprimanded or penalized for misconduct in many ways, many of which may not be explicitly recorded on a court’s docket as a sanction, this table does not provide a comprehensive picture of sanctions imposed against creditors in bankruptcy courts. Moreover, a sanction imposed for creditor misconduct is likely limited to what is sufficient to deter repetition of such conduct or comparable conduct by others similarly situated. Although sanctions may consist of or include directives of a nonmonetary nature, an order to pay a penalty into court, or an order directing payment to the movant of some or all of the reasonable attorneys' fees and other expenses incurred as a direct result of the violation, the Bankruptcy Code and the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure do not permit the award of punitive damages for every violation classifiable as creditor misconduct. However, only punitive damages are reflected in the Table 8 series.

Table 8X shows that creditors were fined for misconduct in 9 consumer cases closed during 2019 and that orders to pay punitive damages totaling $69,530 were issued in 7 of those cases.

Rule 9011 Sanctions Imposed Against Debtors' Attorneys

Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9011 provides that attorneys may be sanctioned for improper or frivolous representations to the court submitted in any petition, pleading, written motion, or other paper. The rule states that “[a] sanction imposed for violation of this rule shall be limited to what is sufficient to deter repetition of such conduct or comparable conduct by others similarly situated.” Any “sanction may consist of, or include, directives of a nonmonetary nature, an order to pay a penalty into court, or . . . an order directing payment to the movant of some or all of the reasonable attorneys' fees and other expenses incurred as a direct result of the violation.” Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9011(c)(2). The Table 9 series captures only misconduct by debtors’ attorneys that rises to the level required for sanctions under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9011. Because a debtor’s attorney may be reprimanded or penalized for misconduct in other ways, this table does not provide a comprehensive picture of sanctions imposed against debtors’ attorneys in bankruptcy courts.

Table 9X shows that of the 658,022 consumer cases terminated in 2020, sanctions were imposed against debtors’ attorneys in 6 cases, with damages totaling $4,110 awarded in 4 cases.

Notes

1 Consumer cases filed under chapter 11 are relatively infrequent and are generally believed to result when debtors exceed the debt limits of 11 U.S.C. ' 109(e), which restricts chapter 13 to debtors with less than $419,275 in noncontingent, liquidated, unsecured debts and less than $1,257,850 of noncontingent, liquidated, secured debts.

2 Debtors calculate their average monthly income and average monthly expenses and report them to the courts on line 10 of Official Bankruptcy Form 106I—Schedule I: Your Income (B 106I) and line 22 of Official Bankruptcy Form 106J—Schedule J Your Expenses (B 106J). The AO then calculates the median of the average monthly incomes reported by debtors for all districts and circuits.

3 “C” is reserved for cases filed under chapter 12, which does not apply to consumer cases.

4 It is not meaningful to calculate medians when the number of cases is small. For this reason, the AO does not calculate medians for fewer than 10 cases at any aggregate level (e.g., district, circuit).

5 The number of cases with completed schedules differs between the Table 1 series and the Table 2 series because those tables draw data from different parts of the summary of schedules. If a debtor completed all necessary fields for inclusion in the Table 1 series, but not the Table 2 series, then that case and its data were included in the appropriate tables in the Table 1 series but not in the Table 2 series, and vice versa.

6 Current monthly income is provided by chapter 7 debtors on line 11 of Official Bankruptcy Form 122A-1—Chapter 7 Statement of Your Current Monthly Income (B 122A-1), by chapter 11 debtors on line 11 of Official Bankruptcy Form 122B—Chapter 11 Statement of Your Current Monthly Income (B 122B), and by chapter 13 debtors on line 11 of Official Bankruptcy Form 122C-1—Chapter 13 Statement of Your Current Monthly Income and Calculation of Commitment Period (B 122C-1).

7 See note 2.

8 See note 2.

9 The time interval measures can be influenced by the proportion of cases filed to cases terminated, where a stable proportion creates better comparability year over year.

10 See note 6.

11 Tables 4, 5, 6, 8A-8X, and 9A-9X include reopened cases, whereas Table 3 does not include reopened cases. Accordingly, the total for cases closed in Table 3 may differ from the total in other tables.

12 See Table 6.

13 Although reaffirmation agreements are technically possible under other chapters of the Bankruptcy Code, they are found almost exclusively in chapter 7 cases. Because no modification of a secured creditor’s rights may be obtained under chapter 7 without consent of the creditor, a debtor who wishes to retain collateral securing a claim must negotiate a reaffirmation agreement acceptable to the creditor. In contrast, under chapters 11, 12, and 13, subject to certain restrictions, the terms of a secured claim may be altered to allow the debtor to retain use of the collateral, thereby obviating the need for a reaffirmation agreement.

14 In some circumstances, a chapter 13 plan can be “completed” (e.g., all payments have been made pursuant to the plan, all required documents and certifications have been filed, and the chapter 13 trustee has filed the final report), but the debtor does not or cannot receive a discharge.