U.S. Bankruptcy Filings Surge 14% in the First Quarter: High Inflation and Debt Pressures Drive a Wave of Small Business and Personal Bankruptcies

Gate News update: U.S. bankruptcy filings surged 14% in the first quarter of 2026, reaching a total of 150,009 cases, up from 132,094 in the same period last year. The increase spans both personal and business bankruptcies, with small businesses hit the hardest. Under Chapter 5 (Subchapter V) of the Bankruptcy Code, small business bankruptcy filings rose 67% year over year, from 499 to 833; Chapter 11 business bankruptcy filings also increased by 37%, reaching 2,422.

Personal bankruptcy filings rose as well. Chapter 7 filings grew 17% to 89,259, while Chapter 13 filings increased 8% to 51,962, for a total of 141,573 consumer bankruptcies. Amy Quackenboss, executive director of the American Bankruptcy Institute (ABI), said that persistent high inflation, high interest rates, credit tightening, and heightened global instability have intensified economic pressure on households and small businesses.

Data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York shows that, as of the end of the fourth quarter of 2025, total U.S. household debt reached $18.8 trillion, credit card balances were $1.28 trillion, and delinquency on mortgage and student loans has clearly worsened. These factors together have driven the continued rise in bankruptcy filings.

On the legislative front, Senators Chuck Grassley and Representative Ben Cline have introduced a bill that would permanently raise the Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization eligibility threshold for small businesses to $7.5 million, while also increasing the Chapter 13 debt limit to $2.75 million to ease debt burdens. However, the International Monetary Fund predicts that U.S. inflation will not return to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target level until early 2027, meaning high borrowing costs are likely to persist in the near term.

Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury debt has recently surpassed $39 trillion, intensifying fiscal pressure. Rising bankruptcy numbers and high debt levels may have long-term effects on consumer spending, investment, and market confidence. Whether legislation can keep pace in time to ease the financial squeeze remains a key variable to watch in the coming months.

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