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California Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Guide 2026

Means test, California exemptions, automatic stay, and what debts are discharged in San Diego

By John Quigley · Updated May 27, 2026

Fresh Start: Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharges most unsecured debts (credit cards, medical bills, personal loans) in 3–6 months. California's generous exemptions protect your home equity, car, and retirement accounts.

Is Chapter 7 Right for You?

Chapter 7 "liquidation" bankruptcy discharges most unsecured debts quickly. It's ideal if you have little or no disposable income, significant unsecured debt (credit cards, medical bills), and limited non-exempt assets. Chapter 13 is better if you have significant home equity to protect, are behind on mortgage payments, or earn too much to qualify for Chapter 7.

The Means Test — California Income Limits

To qualify for Chapter 7, your income must be below the California median OR you must pass a detailed means test showing insufficient disposable income. California median income (2026):

Household SizeAnnual Income Threshold
1 person$74,900
2 persons$95,200
3 persons$107,400
4 persons$124,100
Each additional+$9,900

California Exemptions — What You Can Keep

California offers two exemption systems. Most San Diego filers choose System 2 (CCP §703):

AssetSystem 1 (CCP §704)System 2 (CCP §703)
Homestead$626,400 (SD County)No homestead — use wildcard
WildcardNone$31,950 (any property)
Vehicle$3,825$7,625
Retirement (401k, IRA)UnlimitedUnlimited
Household goods$8,725 per item$875 per item/$8,725 total
Tools of trade$10,275$10,275

San Diego homeowners should use System 1 to protect substantial home equity. Renters or those with less home equity often benefit more from System 2's larger wildcard.

The Automatic Stay — Immediate Relief

Filing bankruptcy immediately triggers an automatic stay under 11 USC §362, which stops:

Chapter 7 Timeline in San Diego

StageTimeline
Credit counseling (required)Before filing
File petition, schedules, means testDay 1
Automatic stay beginsDay 1 (immediate)
341 Meeting of Creditors (San Diego)~30–45 days after filing
Creditor objection deadline60 days after 341 meeting
Discharge order~90–120 days from filing
Case closesAfter discharge (if no assets)

Non-Dischargeable Debts

Chapter 7 does NOT discharge: student loans (rare exceptions), child support and alimony, recent tax debts, criminal fines, debts from fraud, DUI injury judgments, and recent credit card charges for luxury goods. If these make up most of your debt, Chapter 7 may provide limited benefit.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will I lose my house if I file Chapter 7 bankruptcy in San Diego?
San Diego County's homestead exemption is $626,400 under CCP §704.730. If your home equity is below that amount, your home is protected in Chapter 7. The trustee can only sell your home if non-exempt equity exceeds $626,400. With San Diego's median home value, many homeowners have equity that exceeds this amount — in that case, Chapter 13 may be safer for keeping your home.
How does bankruptcy affect my credit score in California?
Chapter 7 bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 10 years from the filing date. Your credit score will drop significantly initially (typically 130–200 points). However, most San Diego bankruptcy filers can qualify for secured credit cards within 12–24 months, auto loans within 1–2 years, and FHA mortgages 2 years after discharge. Many filers see scores improve significantly within 2–3 years because discharged debt is removed.
Can I file bankruptcy on my own without an attorney in San Diego?
You can file pro se (without an attorney) — California allows it. However, Chapter 7 bankruptcy involves complex exemption choices, means test calculations, and the 341 meeting. Errors in California's two exemption systems can cost you thousands in assets. San Diego bankruptcy attorneys typically charge $1,500–$3,000 for Chapter 7, which is often well worth it given the complexity and the consequences of mistakes.
Can I keep my car if I file Chapter 7 bankruptcy?
Yes, in most cases. If you're current on your car payments and your equity is within California's vehicle exemption ($7,625 for System 2), you can reaffirm the loan and keep making payments. If you own the car outright and its value exceeds the exemption, the trustee could sell it — though San Diego trustees rarely pursue low-value vehicles. A bankruptcy attorney can advise on whether reaffirmation or redemption is best for your situation.

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