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Bankruptcy in Georgia

Exemptions, filing details, and your credit rebuild roadmap for Georgia (GA).

Homestead Exemption$21,500
Exemption SystemState exemptions only
LLC Filing Fee$100

Filing Bankruptcy in Georgia

Georgia requires filers to use state exemptions only. You cannot choose the federal exemption schedule. This means your homestead exemption is $21,500, which determines how much equity in your home is protected from creditors.

Homestead Exemption: $21,500

The homestead exemption protects equity in your primary residence during bankruptcy. In Georgia, you can protect up to $21,500 of equity in your primary residence. If your home equity exceeds this amount, a Chapter 7 trustee could force a sale — making Chapter 13 (which lets you keep your home while repaying over 3-5 years) a safer option for homeowners with significant equity.

After Discharge: Rebuilding Credit in Georgia

Once your bankruptcy is discharged, the rebuild process is the same regardless of state. Open a secured credit card (the Discover it Secured is the best option with $0 fee and Cashback Match), keep utilization below 10%, and add a credit-builder loan within 6 months.

If you plan to form a business after bankruptcy, Georgia's LLC filing fee is $100 through the Secretary of State at sos.ga.gov. You can begin building business credit immediately after discharge — bankruptcy only affects your personal credit file, not your new LLC's business credit profile.

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