Your options are:

Under the old rules, people who filed under Chapter 13
had to devote all of their disposable income -- what they
had left after paying their actual living expenses -- to
their repayment plan. The new law adds a wrinkle to this
equation: Although Chapter 13 filers still have to hand over
all of their disposable income, they have to calculate their
disposable income using allowed expense amounts dictated by
the IRS -- not their actual expenses -- if their income is
higher than the median in their state (see "Restricted
Eligibility for Chapter 7," above). These expenses are often
lower than actual costs.
What's worse, these allowed expense amounts must be
subtracted not from the filer's actual earnings each month,
but from the filer's average income during the six months
before filing. This means that debtors may be required to
pay a much larger amount of "disposable income" into their
plan than they actually have to spare every month -- which,
in turn, means that many more Chapter 13 plans will fail.
Under the old law, Chapter 7 filers could value their
property at what they could sell it for in a "fire sale" or
auction. This meant that used furniture, hobby items, cars,
heirlooms, and other property a debtor might want to keep
were typically assumed to have little value -- and,
therefore, that it often fell well within the "exempt
property" categories offered by most states. (Exempt
property is property that cannot be taken by creditors or
the trustee -- you are entitled to keep it.)
Under the new law, you must value your property at what it
would cost to replace it from a retail vendor, taking into
account the property's age and condition. This requirement
is sure to jack up the value of property, which means more
debtors stand to have their property taken and sold by the
trustee.

Under the old rules, most filers could choose the type of bankruptcy that seemed best for them -- and most chose Chapter 7 over Chapter 13. The new law will prohibit some filers with higher incomes from using Chapter 7.

Under the new rules, the first step in figuring out whether you can file for Chapter 7 is to measure your "current monthly income" against the median income for a family of your size in your state. Your "current monthly income" is not your income at the time you file, however: It is your average income over the last six months before you file. For many people, particularly those who are filing for bankruptcy because they recently lost a job, their "current monthly income" according to these rules will be much more than they take in each month by the time they file for bankruptcy.
Once you've calculated your income, compare it to the median
income for your state. (You can find median income tables,
by state and family size, at the website of the United
States Trustee, www.usdoj.gov/ust; click "Means Testing
Information.")
If your income is less than or equal to the median, you can
file for Chapter 7. If it is more than the median, however,
you must pass "the means test" -- another requirement of the
new law -- in order to file for Chapter 7.

The purpose of the means test is to figure out whether
you have enough disposable income, after subtracting certain
allowed expenses and required debt payments, to make
payments on a Chapter 13 plan. To find out whether you pass
the means test, you start with your "current monthly
income," calculated as described above.
From that amount, you subtract both of the following:
* Certain allowed expenses, in amounts set by the
IRS. Generally, you cannot subtract what you actually spend
for things like transportation, food, clothing, and so on;
instead, you have to use the limits the IRS imposes, which
may be lower than the cost of living in your area.
* Monthly payments you will have to make on secured and
priority debts. Secured debts are those for which the
creditor is entitled to seize property if you don't pay
(such as a mortgage or car loan); priority debts are
obligations that the law deems to be so important that they
are entitled to jump to the head of the repayment line.
Typical priority debts include child support, alimony, tax
debts, and wages owed to employees.
If your total monthly disposable income after subtracting
these amounts is less than $100, you pass the means test,
and will be allowed to file for Chapter 7. If your total
remaining monthly disposable income is more than $166.66,
you have flunked the means test, and will be prohibited from
using Chapter 7.
So what about those in the middle? They have to do some more
math. If your remaining monthly disposable income is between
$100 and $166.66, you must figure out whether what you have
left over is enough to pay more than 25% of your unsecured,
nonpriority debts (such as credit card bills, student loans,
medical bills, and so on) over a five-year period. If so,
you flunk the means test, and Chapter 7 won't be available
to you. If not, you pass the means test, and Chapter 7
remains an option.
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