The Discharge Architecture
How the Bankruptcy Code Was Redesigned to Protect Creditors, Punish Individuals, and Make Corporate Failure Easier Than Personal Failure
The Means Test Machine
The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 introduced a formula. It is called the means test. It determines whether an individual may access Chapter 7 bankruptcy — a relatively fast discharge process — or must instead enter Chapter 13, a three-to-five-year court-supervised repayment plan. No equivalent formula exists for corporations seeking Chapter 11 reorganization. This post examines what the formula does, how it works, and what twenty years of filing data show about the population it was designed to catch.
The means test has a public justification and a structural effect, and they are not the same thing. The public justification — stated by its sponsors, repeated in floor debate, and framed in the bill's title — was that it would identify debtors who could afford to repay their debts but were choosing Chapter 7 discharge to avoid doing so. The structural effect, visible in the official U.S. Courts filing statistics from 2006 onward, was a roughly 70% collapse in consumer bankruptcy filings in the first year after the law took effect, sustained across every subsequent economic cycle including the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. The formula did not distinguish between strategic abusers and genuinely distressed debtors. It reduced access for both.
Understanding why requires examining the formula itself — not its stated purpose, but its mechanical operation.
How the Formula Works
The means test operates in two steps. The first step compares the debtor's "current monthly income" to the median income in their state. The second step, triggered only for debtors above the median, runs a formula subtracting allowed expenses from income to determine whether "disposable income" remains available for repayment.
The first step's critical design choice is in the definition of "current monthly income." Despite the word "current," the statute defines it as the debtor's average monthly income over the six months preceding the bankruptcy filing. This is not current income. It is a backward-looking average that captures the debtor's financial condition before the event that caused them to file — the job loss, the medical emergency, the divorce. A person laid off four months before filing will have their six-month average inflated by two months of full-time employment that no longer exists. A person with medical debt incurred during a period of reduced work will be measured against income from before their illness. The formula is designed to measure the past, not the present.
The second step compounds this with a second design choice: the subtraction of allowed expenses uses IRS National and Local Standards — the same expense tables the IRS uses to determine ability to pay back taxes — rather than the debtor's actual expenses. A debtor living in a high-cost city pays actual housing costs. The formula subtracts IRS regional averages. A debtor with unusual medical expenses pays actual costs. The formula subtracts IRS standard allowances. The gap between the formula's assumed expenses and a debtor's real expenses is the mechanism by which the test generates false positives — identifying as able-to-pay debtors who are not.
If a debtor's calculated disposable income exceeds the threshold after these subtractions, a presumption of abuse arises under 11 U.S.C. § 707(b)(2). The debtor must then either convert their case to Chapter 13 and enter a three-to-five-year repayment plan under court supervision, or have their case dismissed entirely. Chapter 7 discharge — the relatively quick exit from unsustainable debt — is presumptively unavailable.
The chart above is the means test's ledger. The BAPCPA cliff — the roughly 70% collapse in non-business filings from the 2005 pre-law rush to the 2006 post-law floor — is the most dramatic single-year movement in the history of American bankruptcy statistics. What follows is equally revealing: filings recovered through the Great Recession, reaching approximately 1.59 million in 2010, but never approached the pre-2005 baseline that would have been predicted by economic conditions alone. The means test had permanently altered the access floor.
The business filing line barely moves. It responds to economic conditions — the 2009 spike, the COVID-era decline, the post-pandemic recovery — but it does not respond to BAPCPA, because BAPCPA did not change the rules for corporations. The two lines on the chart are not measuring different economic realities. They are measuring the same economy through two different legal architectures.
The 2009 Comparison
The most revealing single data point in the post-BAPCPA record is the year 2009. The Great Recession produced the worst economic conditions since the 1930s. Unemployment reached 10%. Home foreclosures hit historic levels. Consumer debt loads, built up through the credit expansion of the 2000s, became unsustainable for millions of households simultaneously.
In 2009, total business bankruptcy filings — Chapter 11 reorganizations and Chapter 7 business liquidations combined — reached approximately 60,837. This was their post-BAPCPA peak, and it reflected genuine economic stress: retailers, manufacturers, and real estate developers filing in large numbers as the recession cut through revenue and credit markets froze.
In the same year, non-business bankruptcy filings — individuals and families — reached approximately 1,473,675. That is a ratio of roughly 24 to 1. Nearly one and a half million households filed for bankruptcy protection in the worst economic year since the Depression, against sixty thousand businesses. The corporate system responded to the recession with the tools Chapter 11 was designed to provide: reorganization, restructuring, emergence. The personal system responded with the tools the means test had left available — which were substantially fewer than before 2005.
The 2009 numbers also reveal what the means test was protecting. The credit industry's stated rationale for reform was that strategic high-income filers were abusing a lenient system. The 2009 recession filers were not high-income strategists. They were workers who had lost jobs, homeowners whose mortgages had reset, and families whose medical costs had consumed savings built before the crisis. The means test did not distinguish between these populations and the population it was designed to target. It reduced access for all of them.
The Chapter 7 to Chapter 13 Shift
The means test's second measurable effect is the composition change within the personal bankruptcy system itself. Before BAPCPA, approximately 75% of personal bankruptcy cases were filed under Chapter 7 — the liquidation chapter that produces a relatively rapid discharge of unsecured debts. Chapter 13, the repayment plan chapter, accounted for most of the remainder.
The means test was specifically designed to reduce Chapter 7 access for debtors above the state median income. Its mechanical operation — the six-month lookback, the IRS expense standards, the disposable income threshold — pushes qualifying debtors into Chapter 13 rather than denying them bankruptcy access entirely. The policy logic was that these debtors "could" repay some portion of their debts over three to five years and should be required to do so before receiving discharge.
The data shows the shift occurred, though less dramatically than the overall filing collapse. Chapter 7 now accounts for approximately 62% of personal filings, down from roughly 75% pre-BAPCPA. Chapter 13 has risen as a proportion. In calendar year 2025, Chapter 7 filings totaled approximately 356,724; Chapter 13 filings totaled approximately 207,889.
What the aggregate numbers do not show is the population that fell out of the system entirely. The roughly 50% long-term reduction in the household bankruptcy rate documented by researchers is not composed entirely of strategic abusers who chose not to file once the system became harder. It is composed in substantial part of genuinely distressed debtors who encountered the means test, could not pass it, could not afford the credit counseling and filing fees that BAPCPA also added, and had no other path. They did not pay their debts. They carried them. The means test did not create repayment. It created non-filing.
What the Formula Did Not Catch
The means test's stated target was the debtor who had sufficient income to repay debts but chose Chapter 7 discharge instead. The credit industry's estimate of this population — drawn from its own analysis, not the NBRC's — suggested it was large enough to justify a sweeping reform of the personal bankruptcy system.
The post-BAPCPA research record does not support this estimate. Academic studies by Lawless, Porter, and Westbrook — the researchers who had produced the foundational empirical work on consumer bankruptcy for two decades — found that the population of strategic high-income filers that the means test was designed to capture was a small fraction of total consumer filings. Most of the debtors displaced by the means test were in the same demographic as the pre-BAPCPA filer population: middle-income households that had experienced income disruption and carried debt loads they could not service.
The formula's six-month lookback was the specific mechanism by which it caught this population. A debtor who had earned $80,000 per year before a layoff, filed bankruptcy four months after losing their job, and was currently earning nothing would have a "current monthly income" — as defined by the statute — of approximately $6,667 per month, placing them above many state medians. The formula would then run IRS expense standards against that income rather than their actual zero current income. The resulting disposable income calculation could generate a presumption of abuse against a person with no income.
This is not an edge case or a theoretical scenario. It is the predictable mechanical output of a formula built around a lagged income measure. Whether it was a drafting oversight or a design choice is the question the FSA Wall addresses. The effect is documented in the filing data: the means test reduced access for a population that, by every available measure, was filing out of genuine distress rather than strategic calculation.
The Architecture's Achievement
The means test achieved what it was designed to achieve. Total personal bankruptcy filings fell by roughly 50% on a long-term basis relative to the pre-BAPCPA trajectory. Chapter 13 filings rose as a proportion of the remainder. Creditor recovery from consumer bankruptcy cases improved. The $18–20 billion in annual discharge losses the credit industry had estimated was reduced.
What did not improve, in any documented way, was the financial condition of the debtors who left the bankruptcy system. They did not repay their debts at higher rates. They carried the debts they could not discharge, often for years, at interest rates that continued to compound. The means test did not transform insolvent debtors into solvent ones. It transformed debtors who would have used the legal system to address their insolvency into debtors who could not — and who remain outside the legal resolution mechanism the bankruptcy system exists to provide.
The distinction matters because it reveals the formula's actual purpose. A reform designed to protect creditors by improving debtor repayment outcomes would show improved repayment in the post-reform data. A reform designed to reduce creditor losses by reducing the number of successful discharge filings would show reduced filings with no corresponding improvement in repayment. The BAPCPA filing data shows the second pattern. The means test is not a repayment mechanism. It is a filing reduction mechanism. Those are not the same thing.
- → 2025 total filings: ~580,000 — still 72% below 2005 peak; 26% below 2019 pre-pandemic level
- → Non-business filings rising: +11.2% year-over-year in 2025 as pandemic buffers expire
- → Means test IRS standards: updated periodically by IRS; current standards published at irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/national-standards-food-clothing-and-other-items
- → FRESH START Through Bankruptcy Act: would modify means test six-month lookback; periodically reintroduced; has not reached Senate floor vote
- → Consumer debt levels 2025: credit card debt exceeds $1.1 trillion; auto loan delinquencies rising; structural conditions for increased filing pressure building
- → U.S. Courts bankruptcy statistics: updated quarterly at uscourts.gov; Table F-2 is the primary public data source for all filing trend analysis
The complete national repayment outcome data for debtors displaced from the bankruptcy system by BAPCPA — the people who filed before 2005 and would have filed after but did not — is not compiled in a single accessible source. Research has documented the filing reduction and inferred that displaced debtors did not substantially improve their repayment rates; the direct repayment tracking data does not exist in public form.
The precise internal analysis underlying the credit industry's $18–20 billion annual loss estimate — the figure used to justify the reform — is not in the public record. Whether it was accurate, inflated, or based on assumptions the industry knew to be questionable cannot be verified from available sources.
The degree to which the six-month lookback definition was specifically chosen over a current-income definition because it would capture recently-unemployed debtors — as opposed to being adopted for administrative convenience or other reasons — is not established by available legislative documents. The effect is documented. The intent behind the specific design choice is not.
Primary Sources · Post 3
- 11 U.S.C. § 707(b)(2) — Means test; § 101(10A) — "Current monthly income" definition
- Official Bankruptcy Form 122A-2 — Chapter 7 Means Test Calculation (current version at uscourts.gov)
- IRS National and Local Standards — irs.gov; updated periodically for means test expense calculations
- U.S. Courts Bankruptcy Statistics, Table F-2 — Annual filings by chapter, 2000–2025 (uscourts.gov)
- Lawless, Robert M.; Porter, Katherine; Westbrook, Jay L. — "Did Bankruptcy Reform Fail? An Empirical Study of Consumer Debtors," American Bankruptcy Law Journal, Vol. 82 (2008)
- American Bankruptcy Institute — annual consumer bankruptcy statistics and chapter composition data
- Himmelstein, David et al. — "Medical Bankruptcy in the United States, 2007," American Journal of Medicine (2009) — documenting post-BAPCPA filer demographics
- Congressional Record — 108th and 109th Congress hearings on bankruptcy reform; consumer advocate and academic testimony on six-month lookback
- Federal Reserve Bank — consumer debt statistics; credit card debt levels 2025


