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Refinance After Bankruptcy

Wondering about refinancing after bankruptcy? Here is exactly how it works in 2026 — the rules lenders apply, the numbers, and your next move.

The short answer

Waiting periods apply after bankruptcy: FHA requires about 2 years after a Chapter 7 discharge (1 year into a Chapter 13 with court approval), while conventional typically requires 4 years for Chapter 7. VA loans generally mirror FHA at 2 years. Re-established credit and on-time payments since discharge are essential to qualify for any refinance.

What refinance lenders look for

Refinance rates and guidelines change. Join the free Refi Rate Guide alerts to hear when the rules or rates that affect this situation move.

Your next steps

Pull your credit, estimate your home's value and current balance to gauge equity, and get quotes from two or three lenders the same day so the comparison is apples-to-apples. Then run the break-even before you commit.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Refinance After Bankruptcy — is it possible in 2026?
Waiting periods apply after bankruptcy: FHA requires about 2 years after a Chapter 7 discharge (1 year into a Chapter 13 with court approval), while conventional typically requires 4 years for Chapter 7. VA loans generally mirror FHA at 2 years. Re-established credit and on-time payments since discharge are essential to qualify for any refinance.
How much equity do I need?
A rate-and-term refinance can work with as little as 3-5% equity. Dropping PMI takes about 20%, and a conventional cash-out requires you to keep 20% (an 80% loan-to-value cap).
Will refinancing hurt my credit?
The hard inquiry causes a small, temporary dip. Rate-shopping multiple lenders within a ~45-day window counts as a single inquiry for scoring.