FORT WAYNE, Indiana, July 10, 2026, 18:12 EDT
Automotive Solutions Inc., operator of two Tuffy Tire & Auto Service shops in Fort Wayne, filed for Subchapter V bankruptcy on July 7. The filing puts another local small business in line with a wider national pattern, as Subchapter V filings across the U.S. jumped 50% in the first half of 2026. The law gives small firms a quicker Chapter 11 option.
This isn’t just about the two stores. Kenneth W. Smith and Deborah A. Smith filed a Subchapter V bankruptcy for themselves on March 23, listing the Automotive Solutions and Tuffy names. The company itself filed 106 days later. That doesn’t say for sure if the debt is the same, but it does tie the owners’ balance sheet to the company’s. You wouldn’t see that in the monthly bankruptcy stats.
Automotive Solutions said it had over $1.1 million in property and more than $2 million in debt in its filing, putting debt at above $1 million per shop for its two locations. The company named Newtek Small Business Finance, part of NewtekOne NASDAQ:NEWT, with a claim of more than $1.4 million, and the U.S. Small Business Administration with over $515,000 owed. Both stores are still operating. No explanation given for the restructuring.
Michael Hunter, vice president at Epiq AACER, said the rise in cases comes from “higher borrowing costs and softening demand.” Amy Quackenboss, executive director at the American Bankruptcy Institute, cited “increasing expenses” and geopolitical volatility. Small-business reorganizations surged in the first half, up more than four times as fast as individual cases. Epiq
| U.S. bankruptcy filings, first half | 2025 | 2026 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subchapter V | 1,107 | 1,663 | +50% |
| Commercial Chapter 11 | 3,595 | 4,589 | +28% |
| All commercial filings | 15,340 | 17,285 | +13% |
| Individual filings | 260,966 | 293,265 | +12% |
Financial stress is rising for households, but the pace is tapering off. LendingTree NASDAQ:TREE reported a 46.9% jump in personal bankruptcy filings to 549,577 in 2025 from 374,240 in 2022. That works out to about 1,506 filings a day. MarketWatch rounded that to 1,500 in its Friday headline. The 2025 filings are still well below the 1.6 million level seen in 2010 after the financial crisis.
Newtek’s listed claim is about 0.05% of NewtekOne’s $2.887 billion in consolidated assets at March 31, so it’s not a big hit for the group. The filing doesn’t detail potential losses, collateral recovery, or the asset’s carrying value. Still, the main focus is on the credit portfolio itself. Newtek’s loan book is young and facing early issues. Newtek Bank had around $54 million in nonperforming loans, meaning credits where payments aren’t current. CEO Barry Sloane called the 18-month-old loan book “still climbing the default curve,” so there may be more losses as loans age. Unguaranteed SBA loans were 32% of total loans, dropping from 45% a year ago. GlobeNewswire
Auto aftermarket numbers are mixed, no sharp drop. Monro (NASDAQ:MNRO) closed 145 lagging stores ahead of fiscal 2026 after fourth quarter sales slipped 7.2% to $273.8 million. Sales at stores open at least a year fell 2.4%. Tire units moved fell 5%. CEO Peter Fitzsimmons called it a “difficult operating environment” and said customers are skipping pricier repairs and opting for cheaper jobs. Automotive Solutions accounts for 1.7% of Tuffy’s 118 store base. Business Wire
| Operator or banner | Scale | Latest stress marker | Investor read-through |
|---|---|---|---|
| Automotive Solutions | 2 Tuffy shops | Over $2 million in debt listed; company filed 106 days after owner filings | Pressure on both owner and operator |
| Tuffy system | 118 locations listed | Debtor holds about 1.7% of all stores | Limited exposure for the wider system |
| Monro | 1,115 corporate stores, 47 franchise | Closed 145 stores, sales dropped 7.2% last quarter | Weaker demand, lower sales per store |
It’s not settled yet. Subchapter V allows faster deadlines on plans and gives companies more room when dealing with creditors. If a plan goes through, stores may stay open and debt could be repaid over a longer period. But if cash doesn’t improve, there could be more store closures, asset sales, or reduced creditor payments.
The next developments will turn up in fresh court filings, not the actual petition. Key things to watch: court orders on cash posted for lenders, monthly operating reports, how Newtek and SBA debt is handled, plus any links to the owners’ other case. Automotive Solutions is too small to affect NewtekOne or the Tuffy chain by itself. This case is really about what it could mean if small business bankruptcies keep rising across the country and start to pressure lenders and franchise systems. This is when those risks might surface.