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Tax Refund and Bankruptcy

It comes up every tax season. You’re looking forward to receiving a big tax refund check, and you’re also working hard to get your bankruptcy case filed. So, what happens to your tax refund in a bankruptcy case?

Tax Refund and Bankruptcy

Here’s How to Keep Your Tax Refund

We’ve said it time and again on the forum: Tax refunds are the number one asset that trustees routinely take from debtors. Exemption laws in most states only go so far to protect cold, hard cash, and anything over and above your state’s designated exemption is fair game for the trustee.

Trustees love to go after tax refunds because, unlike real estate and other assets, there isn’t the overhead and effort associated with listing the property for sale. With cash, they can get a check.

Your Tax Refund is Part of the Bankruptcy Estate

On the day the bankruptcy is filed, any assets that you own become part of the “bankruptcy estate.” Your tax refund is one of those assets. A trustee is appointed to represent your creditors, collecting assets and liquidating those assets to pay your creditors. In many Chapter 7 cases, there simply are not enough assets or cash to make it worthwhile for the trustee to take those to pay the creditors.

Unfortunately, if you are owed a large tax refund, that may be an easy target for the trustee. With a little planning, we can help you keep most, if not all, of your tax refund.

Exception to the Rule: Earned Income Credit

There are some exceptions to the general rule that the trustee is entitled to any refund not received and spent prior to filing. In Colorado, for example, any refund attributed to Earned Income Credit and Additional Child Tax Credit is yours to keep. The rest is subject to turnover.

Want to Keep Your Tax Refund? Spend it.

The best way to avoid losing your tax refund is to file your tax return, receive the refund and spend it prior to filing your bankruptcy. Your bankruptcy attorney should instruct you to keep a record of how your refund is spent.

Your refund can be used for a variety of expenses, including most of your ordinary household expenses, like:

  • Rent
  • Mortgage payments
  • HOA dues
  • Food
  • Utilities
  • Clothing
  • Educational expenses
  • Medical and dental expenses
  • Insurance
  • Home maintenance and repairs
  • Car payment
  • Car repairs and maintenance

You want to have minimal — if any — tax refund money in your bank account on the day that you file your bankruptcy. You may also be eligible to save a portion of your refund using a retirement account. Ask your attorney for more information.

If you are able to follow these steps, you will not be required to turn over your tax refund.

Caution! If you spend your tax refund on luxury goods, use it to repay a friend or family member, or pay off a credit card or other unsecured debt, you may trigger an objection from the trustee, and be required to turn over your tax refund, even if you HAVE spent the money.

If you have NOT received your tax refund on the date of filing, the trustee will be entitled to the tax refund when you receive it.

When the Tax Refund Hits While You’re in Bankruptcy

Ideally, you’ll have very little tax refund left over by the time you’ve filed bankruptcy, and will avoid the plight of Mr. Ellman, below.

In Re Ellman involved a public school teacher in Baltimore, Maryland, who filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy and thereafter received a $15,827 tax refund. The case trustee filed a motion for turnover and the U.S. trustee appeared at the hearing in support of the trustee’s motion. The debtor argued that he relied on his tax refund for living expenses for the upcoming year and that his refund should be excluded from the bankruptcy estate as future wages.

Citing a long line of cases that include tax refunds as part of the bankruptcy estate, the court found the debtor’s argument unpersuasive and ordered that he turn over the funds minus approximately $10,000 he had available in unused exemptions. In total, Mr. Ellman was ordered to turn over $4,615 of his tax refund. To support its ruling, the court in In Re Ellman recited an uncontroversial rule of bankruptcy law that applies to tax refunds:

Income tax refunds are property of a debtor’s bankruptcy estate to the extent they are derived from withholdings from the pre-petition earnings of the debtor.

To put the court’s words in plain English, tax refunds received for wages earned prior to filing bankruptcy are considered property of the bankruptcy estate and are subject to liquidation if no exemptions are available.

Part of the job of any good bankruptcy attorney is to sit down with clients, discuss their assets and come up with a plan for maximizing the exemption laws to their client’s benefit. If you’re considering filing for bankruptcy and are unsure of how a large tax refund will be treated, consult with an experienced bankruptcy lawyer before making any further decisions.

How can you avoid this problem altogether? Don’t receive a tax refund

If you had a large tax refund last year, the first thing we will ask you to do is to look at your W-4 and adjust your exemptions. You only want to have the necessary taxes withheld from your paycheck, nothing more.

When you are filing for bankruptcy you DO NOT want to receive a tax refund. At a minimum, keep the tax refund small.

Instead of receiving a tax refund and giving it to the trustee, wouldn’t you like to have a little more money coming to you in each paycheck throughout the year? I thought so! You can use the IRS’ withholding calculator to determine how many deductions you should be claiming.

Other Bankruptcy Tax Refund Issues

If we file your case later in a year (between August and December), it is likely that the trustee will ask for a copy of that year’s tax return. I know this sounds strange since it’s September and you have not filed a tax return for the current year. The trustee may request a copy of the tax return for the current year as soon as you file it. He will then review the tax return to see if you are going to be receiving any refunds. If you are, he will ask for a pro-rata portion of the refund.

Since your initial appointment with the attorney may be several months before you actually file your case, we want you to plan for your bankruptcy by adjusting your payroll deductions to avoid having the trustee take your refund.

Free Consultation with a Utah Bankruptcy Lawyer

If you have a bankruptcy question, or need to file a bankruptcy case, call Ascent Law now at (801) 676-5506. Attorneys in our office have filed over a thousand cases. We can help you now. Come in or call in for your free initial consultation.

Michael R. Anderson, JD

Ascent Law LLC
8833 S. Redwood Road, Suite C
West Jordan, Utah
84088 United States
Telephone: (801) 676-5506
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Michael Anderson
People who want a lot of Bull go to a Butcher. People who want results navigating a complex legal field go to a Lawyer that they can trust. That’s where I come in. I am Michael Anderson, an Attorney in the Salt Lake area focusing on the needs of the Average Joe wanting a better life for him and his family. I’m the Lawyer you can trust. I grew up in Utah and love it here. I am a Father to three, a Husband to one, and an Entrepreneur. I understand the feelings of joy each of those roles bring, and I understand the feeling of disappointment, fear, and regret when things go wrong. I attended the University of Utah where I received a B.A. degree in 2010 and a J.D. in 2014. I have focused my practice in Wills, Trusts, Real Estate, and Business Law. I love the thrill of helping clients secure their future, leaving a real legacy to their children. Unfortunately when problems arise with families. I also practice Family Law, with a focus on keeping relationships between the soon to be Ex’s civil for the benefit of their children and allowing both to walk away quickly with their heads held high. Before you worry too much about losing everything that you have worked for, before you permit yourself to be bullied by your soon to be ex, before you shed one more tear in silence, call me. I’m the Lawyer you can trust.