Generally, bankruptcy discharge discharges the debtor from all debts that arose before the filing of the bankruptcy petition. Most of the pre-petition debts will be discharged, unless the debt falls into one of the non-dischargeable categories. Even the debts that are generally non-dischargeable may be dischargeable in certain circumstances but require an extra step to establish dischargeability – an adversary proceeding. Adversary proceeding is a lawsuit within the bankruptcy case.

In most cases, the creditor seeking a non-dischargeability determination of its debt must prove that the debt meets the requirements of non-dischargeability, with exception to student loans. To obtain a dischargeability determination of student loans, the debtor must prove “undue hardship.”

Below is the list of the most-encountered non-dischargeable debts in Chapter 7. In Chapter 7, a debtor will still be responsible for repaying these debts after the discharge unless the court determines the debt dischargeable.

Income Taxes

Taxes as to which the debtor either filed a fraudulent tax return or attempted to evade or defeat the tax are not dischargeable in bankruptcy. This includes intentional dishonesty or failure to report income. Although a mere non-payment of taxes is not sufficient to hold the debt non-dischargeable, a non-filing pattern and failure to pay taxes may result in non-dischargeability and denial of the bankruptcy discharge altogether.

In Florida, income taxes are non-dischargeable in bankruptcy, including post-petition interest rate on taxes, unless they meet the following three rules:

  • Three-Year Rule

    Income taxes older than 3 years are dischargeable only if timely tax returns were filed. The operative due date to count three years from is April 15 of the following tax year, or the date of the extension, not the date when the return was filed. For example, a tax return due on April 15 of 2025 (for the tax year 2024) would not be eligible for discharge until three years later or April 15 of 2028. 11 USC § 507 (8) and §523 (a)(1). The three-year period for calculating dischargeability of income taxes is tolled during the pendency of the debtor’s Chapter 13.

  • Two-Year Rule

    In Florida, if the debtor filed tax returns late, the date of filing of the bankruptcy petition must be at least two years after the date of filing the taxes for those taxes to be dischargeable in bankruptcy. In re Shek, 947 F.3d 770 (11th Cir. 2020). The operative date to count two years from will be the date of filing of the return as noted on the IRS transcript.

  • 240-Day Rule

    If the taxes were assessed by the IRS on the debtor, the assessment must be two-hundred and forty days prior to the date of the filing of the bankruptcy petition to qualify for a discharge. 11 USC § 507 (8) and §523 (a)(1).

Tax Liens

Tax liens are non-dischargeable in bankruptcy. IRS automatically files tax liens if the past due taxes exceed $10,000. If the IRS or a state taxing authority file a notice of lien for unpaid taxes, the tax lien attaches to all assets of the debtor, including real estate, personal property and financial assets, and encumbers the property until the debt is fully paid or settled.

The tax lien must be satisfied to sell or refinance the property. However, in certain circumstances, the IRS may allow subordination or withdrawal of the lien. Tax liens are negotiable. The debtor may workout either monthly payments or a lump sum payment to satisfy the lien. Although the IRS can foreclose on homestead property to enforce the lien because the federal laws supersede state exemption laws, this typically does not happen.

Taxes for willful evasion or fraud

If the debtor voluntarily, consciously or knowingly, and intentionally fails to file tax returns and pay taxes, these taxes may be non-dischargeable.

Property taxes

Property taxes incurred within a year of the bankruptcy filing, or property taxes that have become statutory liens are non-dischargeable.

Withholding taxes

Any taxes that the debtor is legally required to withhold or collect from others, such as income withholding taxes, employer’s share of Social Security taxes, sales taxes paid by the debtor’s customers, are non-dischargeable.

Excise taxes

Excise taxes for which a return, if required, is last due, within three years before the bankruptcy filing. Excise taxes include sales taxes, estate and gift taxes, workers’ compensation premiums, occupation taxes.

Certain custom duties

E.g., duties on imports or merchandise.

Certain tax penalties

The IRS and state taxing authorities allow payment of taxes by credit cards. However, if the debtor charges non-dischargeable taxes to his credit cards and later files for bankruptcy, such debts will be non-dischargeable.

Debts incurred to pay non-dischargeable taxes

The IRS and state taxing authorities allow payment of taxes by credit cards. However, if the debtor charges non-dischargeable taxes to his credit cards and later files for bankruptcy, such debts will be non-dischargeable.

Unscheduled Debts

Failure to schedule a debt or list the name of a creditor and an accurate address may result in non-dischargeability of the debt, unless the creditor has notice or actual knowledge of the case in time to file its proof of claim or, with respect to certain debts, a timely request for a dischargeability determination. In no-asset cases, debtor may be allowed to re-open the case to amend the schedules to include the omitted debt and creditor.

Debts, property, or services obtained by false pretenses, false representations or fraud

For example, running up credit card debt and then shortly after filing bankruptcy or misrepresenting income on a credit card application may result in non-dischargeability of these debts.

To except a debt from discharge under this section, a creditor must prove actual fraud in obtaining credit, property, or services. Fraud can be committed by false representation (express misrepresentations) or false pretenses, which are implied representations, or any conduct intended to create and foster a false impression, such as concealment or non-disclosure of material facts.

Some debts are presumed to be non-dischargeable under this category, but the debtor may overcome the presumption:

  • Consumer debts owed to a single creditor more than $800 for luxury goods or services incurred within 90 days of the bankruptcy filing

  • Cash advances more than $1,100 obtained within 70 days of the bankruptcy filing

Debts for Domestic Support Obligations

Domestic support obligations are debts for alimony, maintenance and support, including assistance provided by a government unit. They can be incurred and/or established before, on, or after the date of the bankruptcy filing.

The domestic support obligations may be established by a separation agreement, divorce decree, property settlement agreement, a court order, or a determination by a government unit. Whether a particular domestic support obligation is considered alimony, maintenance, or support usually turns on the parties’ intent at the time of the agreement.

Obligations incurred to third parties in connection with the parties’ divorce, such as debtor’s obligation to pay the attorney’s fees, arising from divorce and child custody proceedings are also non-dischargeable.

Debts arising out of divorce decree or a separation agreement

All domestic support obligations, whether support in nature, property division, or hold harmless obligations are nondischargeable if they arise as part of a divorce or a separation or fixed in connection with a separation agreement, divorce decree or other court order.

For example, if the debtor agrees as part of the property settlement agreement to pay marital debts and hold the other spouse harmless from liability for those debts, these obligations are non-dischargeable in Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The debtor may be able to discharge them in Chapter 13 if the obligation is not found to be the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support.

Condominium or homeowner association assessment or fee that accrue after the bankruptcy filing

Homeowner association (HOA) and condominium dues and fees that accrued after the bankruptcy filing are non-dischargeable. However, HOA and condo fees that became due before bankruptcy are dischargeable.

Debts for repayment of certain retirement plan loans

Any debt owed to a pension, profit-sharing, stock bonus or other plan established under IRS sections 401, 403, 408, 408A, 414, 457, or 501(c).

Debts for willful and malicious injuries by the debtor to another entity or to the property of another entity

 “Willful” means deliberate and intentional. “Malicious” means wrongful and without just cause or excessive even in the absence of personal hatred, spite or ill-will. Also, the debtor must intend the injury, not just the act that leads to the injury.

Debts for death or personal injury caused by driving a motor vehicle while intoxicated

Any debt caused by the debtor’s operation of a motor vehicle, vessel, or aircraft while intoxicated is non-dischargeable in both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. The driver does not need to be criminally charged or found guilty of DUI for the debt to be non-dischargeable. The debtor’s intoxication may be established by a civil trial or by the bankruptcy court based on consideration all available evidence and circumstances.

Educational Loans

Absent “undue hardship,” most student loans are non-dischargeable. Non-dischargeable loans include government or non-profit student loans or loans that qualify for a tax deduction. Loans made by federal credit units and banks, colleges, or universities that are guaranteed or insured by the U.S. or one of the states are considered to be made by governmental units and thus, are non-dischargeable. Also, consolidation loans resulting from the refinancing of a series of student loans are non-dischargeable. Private loans that are not “qualified education loans” under IRS section 221(d)(1) are dischargeable. The non-dischargeability of student loans applies to both the student debtor and any co-makers of the loan, e.g., parents.

Florida adopted the Brunner test to allow courts to discharge student loans. Under the Brunner test, the debtor must establish three elements:

  • That the debtor cannot maintain, based on current income and expenses, a “minimal” standard of living for himself/herself and dependents if forced to repay the loans

  • That additional circumstances exist indicating that this state of affairs is likely to persist for a significant portion of the repayment period of the student loans (“undue hardship” test”)

  • That the debt has made good faith efforts to repay the loans

Most student loan discharge cases turn on proving persistent “undue hardship,” the second element of the test, which is a demanding requirement.

Debts relating to waiver or denial of discharge in a prior bankruptcy case

Debts that the debtor failed to schedule in a prior bankruptcy case or debts for which the discharge was denied are non-dischargeable.

Fines, penalties, and forfeitures to a governmental unit

The debt has to be for a fine, penalty, or forfeiture, not compensation for actual monetary loss/damages. For example, fines imposed for contempt of court in a criminal case, costs assessed against an attorney by a state court in a disciplinary proceeding, penalties levied by the government, criminal restitution, costs of criminal prosecution.

Fraud committed while acting in a fiduciary capacity or debts created by embezzlement or larceny

A fiduciary relationship is a legal and ethical relationship where one party (the fiduciary) is obligated to act solely in the best interests of another party (the beneficiary). Attorney-client, landlord-tenant, parent-children, creditor-investors, bank officers-depositors, executors/administrators-beneficiaries are examples of fiduciary relationships.

Embezzlement is the fraudulent appropriation of property by a person to whom such property has been entrusted, or into whose hands it has lawfully come. Larceny is the fraudulent and wrongful taking and carrying away of the property of another with intent to convert the property to the taker’s use without the consent of the owner.

Although for debts created by embezzlement or larceny to be excepted from discharge the existence of a fiduciary relationship is not necessary, fraud is a prerequisite to finding an embezzlement or larceny. A creditor would have to demonstrate that the debtor appropriated funds or property for his own benefit and that he did so with fraudulent intent. For example,  if a debtor is holding funds or property for another and then uses the funds for his own benefit or fails to deliver the sale proceeds from the property to the owner, the debt may not be excepted from discharge.

Debts for restitution for a federal criminal offense

Debts for violation of certain federal or state securities laws or regulations

Many of these debts are dischargeable in Chapter 13, unless debtor receives a “hardship” discharge, except certain income taxes, debts obtained by fraud, unscheduled debts, debts obtained by fraud in a fiduciary capacity, debts for embezzlement and larceny, domestic support obligations, debts for willful and malicious injury to another entity or property, student loans, and drunk driving debts.

Chapter 13 also does not discharge criminal restitutions or criminal fines and restitution or damages awarded in a civil action as a result of willful or malicious injury by the debtor that cause personal injury or death. A “willful” injury is “a deliberate or intentional injury, not merely a deliberate or intentional act that leads to injury. Debts for negligent and reckless conduct that results in injury are dischargeable.

Also, to determine non-dischargeability of the following debts, a creditor who is owed a debt must initiate a non-dischargeability adversary proceeding within 60 days after the first date set for the meeting of creditors, unless the creditor obtains an extension. If the creditor fails to request a non-dischargeability determination, the debt is discharged, and the debtor does not need to do anything. The following debts are subject to such automatic discharge:

  • Debts obtained by false pretenses or representations; actual fraud; false financial statements; luxury goods obtained within 90 days of bankruptcy in the amount of $800; cash advances more than $1,100

  • Debts for fraud while acting in a fiduciary capacity or debts for embezzlement or larceny

  • Debts for willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another entity to the property of another entity

How can we help?

We can help you maximize your bankruptcy success by carefully reviewing your debts for any potential issues concerning non-dischargeability of any debts and/or any options to discharge them. The law regarding non-dischargeability is not black and white and each case has to be evaluated on its specific circumstances.

At Anna Handy Law Firm, P.A., we are acutely aware of the financial strain of our clients. We do not charge you for the initial phone consultation. We do not push you to file bankruptcy to get a retainer. We don’t judge – we find solutions. We give you honest advice about your options and rights, including the “doing nothing” approach. As such, we offer very affordable bankruptcy fees. We make our fees competitive and in certain cases, we offer payment plans to address each case individually as each case has a different set of circumstances. 

If you are overburdened by your debts, being sued or harassed by creditors, or subject to wage garnishment, do not hesitate to call us now for a free initial phone consultation. The attorney’s direct business cell phone number is (386) 248-3000. You may also email us at [email protected].