After Chapter 7 discharge, you’re debt-free and ready to rebuild. Most people are surprised how quickly they can recover — secured credit cards right away, auto loans within 1-2 years, and a mortgage within 2-4 years.

Post-Discharge Timeline

Timeline Milestone
Immediately Debts discharged; creditors must stop all collection permanently
1-3 months Apply for secured credit card; begin rebuilding
6-12 months Credit score begins improving with on-time payments
1-2 years Qualify for auto loan (higher rates); credit score 580-650
2-3 years FHA/VA mortgage eligible; credit score 620-680
3-4 years Conventional mortgage eligible; credit score 650-700
5-7 years Near-normal credit access; score 700+ possible
10 years Chapter 7 removed from credit report

Credit Rebuilding Strategy

Step Action When
1 Get a secured credit card (deposit = credit limit) Immediately
2 Make small purchases and pay in full monthly Monthly
3 Add a credit-builder loan 3-6 months post-discharge
4 Get added as authorized user on family member’s card Anytime
5 Apply for unsecured credit card 12-18 months
6 Apply for auto loan (if needed) 1-2 years
7 Start saving for a home down payment Immediately
8 Apply for mortgage 2-4 years

Mortgage Waiting Periods

Loan Type Waiting Period (from discharge) Min Credit Score
FHA 2 years 580 (3.5% down)
VA 2 years No official minimum (620+ typical)
USDA 3 years 640
Conventional (Fannie Mae) 4 years 620
Conventional (Freddie Mac) 4 years 620
FHA (with extenuating circumstances) 1 year 580

What You Keep After Chapter 7

Asset Typically Kept?
Home (if equity within exemption) ✅ Yes
Vehicle (if equity within exemption) ✅ Yes
Retirement accounts (401k, IRA) ✅ Yes (fully exempt)
Household goods and furniture ✅ Yes
Clothing and personal items ✅ Yes
Tools needed for work ✅ Yes
Social Security benefits ✅ Yes
Future earnings ✅ Yes

What You Can’t Do (Restrictions)

Restriction Details
File Chapter 7 again Must wait 8 years from filing date
File Chapter 13 Must wait 4 years from Chapter 7 filing date
Certain professional licenses Some states require disclosure; rarely denied
Security clearance Cleared debt may actually help (no leverage risk)
Government employment Cannot deny employment solely based on bankruptcy

Creditor Violations After Discharge

If a Creditor… Your Rights
Tries to collect a discharged debt Violation of the discharge injunction
Calls about a discharged debt Report to your attorney; may be awarded damages
Reports the debt as still owed Dispute with credit bureaus; report to court
Sues for a discharged debt Motion for contempt of court

Credit Score Recovery Timeline

Months After Discharge Expected Score Range Actions Taken
0 450-550 Score at lowest point
6 520-600 Secured card, on-time payments
12 580-640 Continued positive history
24 620-680 Multiple credit lines, all on time
36 650-700 Mortgage-eligible range
48 670-720 Competitive rates available
60 700-740 Near-normal credit profile

The Bottom Line

Chapter 7 is a reset, not a permanent stain. Most people rebuild credit faster than they expect. The keys: get a secured credit card immediately, pay every bill on time without exception, keep credit utilization low (under 30%), and be patient. Within 2-4 years, you can qualify for a mortgage. Within 5-7 years, your credit profile can be near-normal.

Related: What Happens When You File for Bankruptcy? | What Happens to Your House in Bankruptcy?