Why Your Mortgage and Car Payments Are “Invisible” After Bankruptcy
Why Your Mortgage and Car Payments Are “Invisible” After Bankruptcy

You’ve received your discharge with your Chapter 7 bankruptcy. You’re making every car or mortgage payment on time each month, working hard to improve your credit after filing for bankruptcy. You’re waiting for your credit score to start climbing. Then you check your credit report and see… nothing.
No updates. No “Current” status. It’s like your car loan or mortgage doesn’t exist.
If your lawyer didn’t sign a Reaffirmation Agreement, and you didn’t represent yourself moving forward, you’ve likely entered the “Ghost Payment” zone. Here is what is actually happening with your unreported payments.
Key Takeaways for Unreported Mortgage & Car Payments:
- The Reaffirmation Requirement: In many jurisdictions, if you don’t sign a Reaffirmation Agreement, the lender is not required to report your on-time payments to the credit bureaus.
- Payment vs. Credit: Making payments “voluntarily” allows you to keep the house or car (the collateral), but it does nothing to rebuild your credit score unless that agreement was filed and approved by the court.
- The Unreported Mortgage or Car Payment Fix: If you didn’t reaffirm the debt, your credit report will likely show “Discharged in Bankruptcy. You will need to take other steps to rebuild your credit.
When you don’t reaffirm a debt, that debt is technically “discharged.” Even if you keep the car and keep paying, the “Ride and Drive” method, most lenders will stop reporting those payments to the credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion).
Why? Because they are terrified of being sued for violating the “discharge” under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. They worry that sending you a statement or reporting your payment could be seen as an illegal attempt to collect a debt you no longer legally owe.
Well, at least that’s what the creditors argue. In reality, that’s just creditors trying to silently force debtors into signing reaffirmation agreements.
Depending on your situation, signing or not signing a Reaffirmation Agreement has consequences, creating a frustrating Catch-22:
The Good News: If the Reaffirmation Agreement wasn’t signed, you aren’t liable for the debt if your situation changes. For example, if the car dies tomorrow or you can no longer afford the monthly payments, you can drop the keys at the dealership and walk away without owing a dime.
The Bad News: Without a signed Reaffirmation Agreement filed with the court, you are getting zero “credit” for those monthly payments. When you go buy your next car, the lender won’t see your history of reliability. The situation is made worse by a mortgage refinance, which shows years of no payments on your credit report.
Professor’s Note: While the mortgage lender could easily verify that your home is still in your possession, that you still reside there, and that the title never transferred, the reality is that without proof of payments and timely payments reflected in your credit report, the underwriting department will likely deny your loan.
Article credited from bankruptcyblog.com








