how long can a bankruptcy remain on a credit report?
A bankruptcy can stay on your credit report for 7 to 10 years , depending on the type of bankruptcy and reporting rules used by the credit bureaus.
How long can a bankruptcy remain on a credit report?
General timeline (Quick Scoop)
- In the U.S., a bankruptcy can be reported on credit reports for up to 10 years from the filing or adjudication date.
- The exact time depends on the chapter you file under and the policies of each credit bureau.
- During that time, it is visible to most mainstream lenders and can significantly affect your ability to get new credit or good interest rates.
By bankruptcy type (Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13)
Most individuals file under Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 in the U.S., and they are treated differently on credit reports.
- Chapter 7 bankruptcy
- Often called a “liquidation” bankruptcy.
- Typically remains on your credit report for 10 years from the filing date.
* The case itself may end in a few months, but the record stays the full 10 years unless reported differently in rare situations.
- Chapter 13 bankruptcy
- A “reorganization” where you repay part of your debt over 3–5 years.
* Commonly stays on credit reports for **7 years** from the filing date.
* Because you repay over time, some lenders view Chapter 13 slightly more favorably than Chapter 7 after discharge, even though both still harm your credit.
- Other chapters (11, 12)
- Consumer guidance from regulators indicates that any bankruptcy filing can be reported for up to 10 years , regardless of chapter.
Official guidance vs. lender/credit bureau practice
There are two overlapping “rules” people often see discussed in articles and forums.
- Regulatory guidance (U.S. CFPB)
- States that bankruptcy information may remain on credit reports up to 10 years from entry of the order or adjudication.
* Allows, in certain cases, reporting **beyond 10 years** , for example where credit histories are used in large-value transactions.
- Credit bureau and lender descriptions
- Major bureaus and lenders often describe the pattern as:
- Chapter 7: 10 years from filing.
- Chapter 13: 7 years from filing.
- Major bureaus and lenders often describe the pattern as:
* This is why you’ll frequently see “7–10 years” as the standard answer.
In practice, for most consumers, you’ll see your bankruptcy vanish from your standard personal credit reports somewhere around year 7 (Chapter 13) or year 10 (Chapter 7).
Can a bankruptcy be removed earlier?
- You cannot force the removal of an accurate bankruptcy entry before it reaches its time limit.
- You can dispute the entry if:
- It’s not yours (identity error).
- It shows the wrong filing date or chapter.
- It remains on the report past the 7- or 10‑year window that applies to your case.
If a dispute shows the record is inaccurate or outdated, the bureau must correct or remove it.
What happens while it’s on your report?
Even though the bankruptcy sits on your credit file for years, its impact on your score and access to credit changes over time.
- Biggest damage in the first 1–2 years
- Scores typically drop sharply around the time of filing.
- Gradual improvement
- As you make on‑time payments on any remaining or new accounts, the negative weight of the bankruptcy can lessen well before it disappears.
- Some lenders will still ask
- Even after it falls off your report, some credit, mortgage, or rental applications explicitly ask if you’ve ever filed for bankruptcy, and you are required to answer truthfully.
Simple example
Imagine you file Chapter 7 in June 2026. That filing typically remains on your reports until around June 2036.
If instead you file Chapter 13 in June 2026, it usually comes off around June 2033 , about 7 years after the filing date.
Key takeaway
- Maximum time: up to 10 years on your credit report in most consumer situations, depending on chapter and bureau rules.
- Typical rule of thumb:
- Chapter 7 → about 10 years.
- Chapter 13 → about 7 years.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.