Vehicle Exemption in Oklahoma
If you are worried about losing your car in bankruptcy, the first question is how much equity you have -- and whether Oklahoma's vehicle exemption covers it.
| Protection | Oklahoma Amount |
|---|---|
| Vehicle exemption | $7,500 |
| Wildcard (can supplement) | $0 |
| Federal exemption (if available) | Not available -- Oklahoma opted out |
How equity works: If your car is worth $15,000 and you owe $12,000 on the loan, your equity is $3,000. If the exemption covers $3,000+, your car is fully protected in Chapter 7.
If your car is underwater (you owe more than it is worth), the trustee has no interest in it -- your exemption covers it completely.
Chapter 7: Keeping Your Car
In Chapter 7, you must file a Statement of Intention (Form 108) within 30 days declaring what you want to do with each secured debt, including your car loan. Your options are:
- Reaffirmation: Sign a new agreement to keep paying the loan. The car stays with you, but the debt survives the bankruptcy. You remain personally liable if you later default.
- Redemption: Pay the lender the car's current fair market value in a lump sum under 11 U.S.C. Section 722. This works if you owe more than the car is worth and can come up with the cash (some companies specialize in redemption loans).
- Surrender: Give the car back. The remaining deficiency balance is discharged.
- Retain and pay (ride-through): In some districts, you may be able to keep paying without reaffirming. Not all courts in Oklahoma allow this -- check local practice.
Oklahoma vehicle exemption: $7,500. If your equity is within this amount, the trustee cannot take your car in Chapter 7.
Chapter 13: Catching Up on Car Payments
Chapter 13 is often the better choice if you are behind on car payments. Under Chapter 13:
- You keep the car while you catch up on missed payments through your 3-5 year repayment plan.
- Cramdown option: If you purchased the car more than 910 days (about 2.5 years) before filing, you can reduce the secured claim to the car's current market value under 11 U.S.C. Section 506(a). The remaining balance becomes unsecured debt paid at pennies on the dollar.
- Interest rate reduction: The court may set a lower interest rate on the car loan (typically prime + 1-3%) under the Till formula.
- Automatic stay protection: The moment you file, the lender must stop all repossession efforts under 11 U.S.C. Section 362.
Cramdown savings example: If you owe $18,000 on a car worth $12,000 and qualify for cramdown, you pay $12,000 as secured debt through your plan. The $6,000 difference becomes unsecured -- potentially saving thousands.
Repossession and the Automatic Stay
If your car is about to be repossessed -- or already has been -- filing bankruptcy triggers the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. Section 362. This immediately halts all collection activity, including repossession.
If your car has not been repossessed yet: Filing stops the repo. The lender must cease all attempts to take the vehicle. If a repo agent comes after you file, they are violating a federal court order.
If your car was already repossessed: If the lender has not yet sold the car, you may be able to get it back by filing bankruptcy and invoking the automatic stay. Once the car is sold, recovery becomes much harder.
Stay violations in Oklahoma: If a creditor violates the automatic stay, you can file a motion for sanctions under Section 362(k). The court may award actual damages, attorney fees, and in egregious cases, punitive damages.
What Oklahoma Filers Should Know
Oklahoma joins Texas, Florida, Iowa, and Kansas with an unlimited homestead (subject to acreage limits).
Key facts for Oklahoma filers trying to keep their car:
- Vehicle exemption: $7,500
- Wildcard available: $0
- Federal option: No -- must use state exemptions
- Bankruptcy districts: Northern District, Eastern District, Western District
Most people keep their cars in bankruptcy. The key is understanding your equity, choosing the right chapter, and using exemptions strategically.
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