My 3 years for my 98K (I've paid back 102K and only borrowed 92K - capitalization of interest got me) via the physician's letter disability discharge option won't be final until Nov 2026 due to the 3 year monitoring period. As a result i will get a 1099-C. Netnet states on their website that when the 3 year monitoring is up is when your student loan is considered discharged for tax purposes (which is very unfortunate). The federal circuit court district I live in a Dallas judge ruled only those who are permanently and totally disabled can discharge their debts via an adversarial proceeding in bankruptcy (it used to be Bruner's but on appeal his ruling was upheld). Now I'd qualify for bankruptcy that way that although that is my only debt. Not sure if I can do that if they are already in monitoring though. I need to find out (unless someone already knows that). My question presumes I can do that.
If I go the bankruptcy route before the end of 2025 will I get a 1099-C? Also if I go that route will what little I still have in retirement (employer plus a small Roth IRA) be taken in the bankruptcy (I realize that part isn't a turbo tax question but maybe someone reading that knows the answer).
I know about insolvency. I don't want to lose what little I have in retirement to go that route if I can find another way where the discharged amount isn't taxable (I am 71).
Thank you.
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
Normally student loan debt can't be discharged in a bankruptcy, except for the adversarial proceeding you mention.
Your retirement plan funds are protected in most cases from bankruptcy under the ERISA Act (Employee Retirement Income Security).
Here's some info from Studentaid.gov you may find helpful.
Debts discharged in bankruptcy are usually not considered taxable income. Here's more info from the IRS on that.
Still have questions?
Make a postAsk questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
annon1
Level 3
trust812
Level 3
bhuether
Level 3
pattysamsel63
Level 3
San11
Level 1
Did the information on this page answer your question?
You have clicked a link to a site outside of the TurboTax Community. By clicking "Continue", you will leave the Community and be taken to that site instead.