South Carolina Asset Research

South Carolina Bankruptcy Exemptions

When a South Carolina debtor files for bankruptcy, state law lets them shield a fixed slice of property from creditors. South Carolina is an opt-out state, so filers must use the South Carolina exemptions in S.C. Code Section 15-41-30, not the federal list, and the dollar figures are re-set for inflation every two years. This guide explains the current homestead, motor-vehicle, and wildcard amounts, why the schedule on a filing rarely reflects everything a debtor actually owns, and how a public-records research firm helps creditors locate the non-exempt assets that fall outside the protected categories.

Opt-Out State S.C. Code 15-41-30 Since 2004
Opt-OutNo Federal 522(d)
Every 2 YrsInflation Adjusted
15-41-30Governing Statute
24 HoursAsset Locate Turnaround

The Short Version

South Carolina is a state-exemption-only (“opt-out”) jurisdiction, so a debtor filing bankruptcy here must use the exemptions in S.C. Code Section 15-41-30 and cannot choose the federal set. Effective July 1, 2024, the homestead exemption protects roughly seventy-six thousand dollars of home equity for a single filer and about double that for a married couple who both own and file, the motor-vehicle exemption shields about seven thousand six hundred dollars of equity in one vehicle, and household goods are protected up to roughly six thousand one hundred dollars. These figures are adjusted for inflation every even-numbered year. The practical point for a creditor: the exemption schedule covers only listed categories up to those caps, so equity above a cap, a second vehicle, business interests, and non-exempt accounts can remain reachable. Knowing what a debtor actually holds is where a public-records asset locate matters.

Watch: South Carolina Exemptions in Brief

Why an exemption schedule does not equal a debtor’s full asset picture.

▶ Video Overview

South Carolina Is an Opt-Out State

Filers here use the state list, not the federal one.

The federal Bankruptcy Code lets each state decide whether its residents may choose the federal exemptions in 11 U.S.C. Section 522(d) or must use the state’s own list. South Carolina has opted out. Under S.C. Code Section 15-41-35, no individual may exempt property specified in 11 U.S.C. Section 522(d) “except as may be expressly permitted by this chapter or by other provisions of law of this State.” In plain terms, a South Carolina debtor is locked into the state exemption schedule in Section 15-41-30 and the scattered protections elsewhere in state law, such as retirement-account and certain insurance provisions.

That matters to a creditor because it removes a choice that exists in roughly a third of states. There is no shopping between two lists to maximize protection; the debtor gets exactly what South Carolina grants. So the exemption analysis on a South Carolina bankruptcy is more predictable than in opt-in states, and the question is simply whether the debtor’s equity in each category fits under the South Carolina cap, or spills over into reachable territory.

Key South Carolina Exemption Amounts

Inflation-adjusted figures under S.C. Code 15-41-30, effective July 1, 2024.

ExemptionStatuteCurrent Amount (single filer)Notes
Homestead15-41-30(A)(1)About seventy-six thousand dollarsDoubles to roughly one hundred fifty-two thousand dollars when two owners both file; applies to a residence or burial plot.
Motor Vehicle15-41-30(A)(2)About seven thousand six hundred dollarsEquity in one vehicle only; a second vehicle’s equity is generally not exempt under this subsection.
Household Goods15-41-30(A)(3)About six thousand one hundred dollarsAggregate cap on furnishings, apparel, appliances, books, animals, crops, instruments.
Jewelry15-41-30(A)(4)About one thousand five hundred dollarsSeparate cap from household goods.
Cash / Liquid Assets15-41-30(A)(5)Up to roughly seven thousand six hundred dollarsAvailable only to a filer who does NOT claim the homestead exemption.
Unused-Exemption Wildcard15-41-30(A)(7)A capped portion of unused exemptionLets a filer apply a limited slice of unused exemption value to other property; the amount is modest and inflation-adjusted.

The amounts above are the inflation-adjusted figures that took effect July 1, 2024, expressed as the rounded current values rather than the lower base numbers printed in the statute text. Under S.C. Code Section 15-41-30(B), the South Carolina Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Office recalculates these caps for inflation every even-numbered year and publishes the new amounts in the State Register, effective July 1, rounded to the nearest twenty-five dollars. A fresh adjustment is due July 1, 2026, so any creditor relying on these numbers should confirm the figure in effect on the debtor’s filing date. Figures here are general legal information, not legal advice; confirm specifics with a South Carolina bankruptcy attorney or the current State Register.

Why the Schedule Rarely Shows Everything

Exemptions cap what is protected, not what exists.

An exemption schedule is a defensive document. It lists only the property a debtor wants protected, valued the way the debtor chose to value it, slotted into the categories that carry a cap. It is not an inventory of net worth. A South Carolina debtor with a home worth well above the homestead cap, a second vehicle, an ownership stake in a business, a brokerage account, or recently transferred property may show none of that fully on the schedule, or may understate it. The exemptions tell a creditor what is shielded; they say nothing reliable about what lies above the caps or outside the listed categories.

This is exactly the gap a creditor needs closed. Equity in the home above roughly seventy-six thousand dollars is not exempt. A second car’s equity falls outside the single-vehicle exemption. Non-exempt bank balances, investment accounts, business interests, and assets moved to relatives within the look-back window can all be reachable by the trustee or by a creditor pursuing a non-dischargeable debt. Identifying those assets starts with public-records research, not with the debtor’s own paperwork.

Where Non-Exempt Assets Hide

Common places equity sits beyond the South Carolina caps.

Home Equity Over the Cap

Equity above roughly seventy-six thousand dollars for a single filer falls outside the homestead exemption and may be reachable.

A Second Vehicle

The motor-vehicle exemption covers one car. A boat, truck, or extra vehicle’s equity generally is not protected by that subsection.

Accounts Above the Cash Cap

The liquid-asset exemption only helps filers who skip the homestead, so brokerage and bank balances can sit exposed.

Business Interests

Ownership in an LLC, partnership, or closely held company is not a listed personal exemption category and may carry recoverable value.

Transfers to Relatives

Property moved to family before filing can be questioned within the trustee’s look-back window and clawed back if improper.

Out-of-State Property

Real estate or accounts a South Carolina filer holds elsewhere still belong to the estate and may not be fully shielded.

From Filing to Asset Picture

How a public-records research firm fills the gap a schedule leaves.

1

Send the Debtor Details

A name, last known address, the case number, employer, or any identifiers you hold from the bankruptcy filing.

2

We Research Public Records

Property deeds, vehicle and vessel titles, UCC filings, business registrations, and address history are pulled and cross-checked.

3

We Map Non-Exempt Value

Findings are compared against the South Carolina exemption caps to flag equity and assets that fall outside protection.

4

You Get a Documented Report

Your attorney or trustee receives a sourced summary to support an objection, a 2004 exam, or a collection strategy.

The Schedule vs. Independent Research

Two very different views of the same debtor.

A bankruptcy schedule is the debtor’s account of their own property; independent public-records research is an outside view built from deeds, titles, registrations, and filings. The first is shaped by what the debtor chose to disclose and how they valued it; the second is anchored in records the debtor does not control. For South Carolina creditors and trustees, the value is in comparing the two: where the independent picture shows equity, vehicles, or interests that the schedule omits or undervalues, that delta is where recovery often lives, and it is exactly what an exemption analysis alone cannot reveal.

Who We Help

We research; you act on a documented asset picture.

Creditor Attorneys

Non-exempt assets identified

Bankruptcy Trustees

Estate property located

Collections Firms

Debtors and equity traced

Judgment Holders

Post-judgment assets found

Lenders

Collateral and equity verified

Family Law Counsel

Hidden property surfaced

Whoever you are, the wall is the same: an exemption schedule tells you what is protected, not what exists. We close that gap with professional skip tracing and asset research, delivering a documented, sourced view of a South Carolina debtor’s property measured against the state caps. If garnishment is also on the table, our companion guide on South Carolina wage garnishment laws covers how income is reached, and our walkthrough on how to find hidden assets details the records we work. Comparing states is easy too, with parallel guides for Utah bankruptcy exemptions and Washington bankruptcy exemptions. We are a public-records research firm, not a law firm, and for a legitimate creditor matter a verified asset locate typically comes back within 24 hours.

Our Commitment

We deliver a lawful, documented, public-records asset picture of a South Carolina debtor, measured against the current Section 15-41-30 exemption caps, so creditors and trustees can act on facts rather than on a self-reported schedule. Court-ready research for legitimate creditor matters since 2004.

People Locator Skip Tracing Investigation Team conducts skip tracing and public-records asset research for lawful, permissible purposes only. We are a public-records research firm, not a law firm, not a consumer reporting agency, and not licensed private investigators. Last reviewed 2026. This page is general legal information, not legal advice; consult a South Carolina bankruptcy attorney for your situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a South Carolina debtor use the federal bankruptcy exemptions?

No. South Carolina is an opt-out state. Under S.C. Code Section 15-41-35, residents may not claim the federal exemptions in 11 U.S.C. Section 522(d) and must use the South Carolina list in Section 15-41-30, plus other protections in state law.

How much home equity does the South Carolina homestead exemption protect?

Effective July 1, 2024, the homestead exemption shields roughly seventy-six thousand dollars of equity for a single filer, and about double that, near one hundred fifty-two thousand dollars, when two owners both file. The figure is inflation-adjusted every even-numbered year, so confirm the amount in effect on the filing date.

What is the South Carolina motor-vehicle exemption?

The vehicle exemption protects roughly seven thousand six hundred dollars of equity in one motor vehicle as of the July 1, 2024 adjustment. It applies to a single vehicle, so a second car’s equity generally falls outside this subsection and may be reachable.

How often do the South Carolina exemption amounts change?

Under Section 15-41-30(B), the amounts are adjusted for inflation every even-numbered year by the South Carolina Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Office, published in the State Register, and rounded to the nearest twenty-five dollars. A new adjustment is due July 1, 2026.

Does South Carolina have a wildcard exemption?

South Carolina allows a capped unused-exemption wildcard under Section 15-41-30(A)(7) and a separate cash or liquid-asset exemption under (A)(5) that is available only to a filer who does not claim the homestead. Both are modest and inflation-adjusted; confirm current figures in the State Register.

What assets stay reachable despite the exemptions?

Home equity above the homestead cap, a second vehicle, business interests, non-exempt accounts, and property transferred before filing can all remain reachable by the trustee or a creditor. The exemption schedule shows what is protected, not the full asset picture.

Are you a law firm or a credit bureau?

Neither. We are a public-records research firm. We are not a law firm and provide general legal information, not legal advice, and we are not a consumer reporting agency, so our research is not used for FCRA-covered eligibility decisions. Consult a South Carolina bankruptcy attorney for legal guidance.

How fast is a South Carolina asset locate, and what do you need?

For a legitimate creditor matter, a verified asset locate typically comes back within 24 hours. Send the debtor’s name, last known address, the bankruptcy case number, and any employer or identifiers you have, and we build the picture from public records.

See What the Schedule Leaves Out

We deliver a documented, public-records view of a South Carolina debtor’s property, measured against the current exemption caps, typically within 24 hours. Contact us to get started.

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