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Bankruptcy Forms for theThis page begins with a discussion of forms required, generally, for any bankruptcy.
For forms specific to the the Colorado District Bankruptcy Court, click here.
Each court has its own local rules, but the basic bankruptcy consists of the forms you see listed in the table below, plus any additional forms your local court may require.
Timeliness note: Always check that the date on the form you're using is the date of the form your court currently requires -- or will require in the future, on the date you're planning to file. Each form has a a month and year in the upper right corner.
Sometimes forms are updated and change several times during a year, and other times there may be no changes for a year or more. We make every effort to keep the links on this page up to date, but it's essential that you confirm with your local court that you are using what they consider to be the current version of all forms.
The Colorado District Bankruptcy Court has additional local forms and requirements, too. See below.
The information below is based on an uncommonly clear and helpful chart from the Federal Bankruptcy Court of the Western District of Wisconsin. These are the basic requirements for any Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
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Chapter 13 filings require slightly different forms.
Local
Forms Required by the Colorado District Bankruptcy CourtEvery local bankruptcy court has one or more additional special forms that you must file when you file the standard set of bankruptcy forms. All courts have special local requirements for the "mailing matrix" of the names and addresses of your creditors. Every court publishes very specific rules about how this list must be formatted so that the court can scan it into its computer system. Check your court's website (Colorado District Bankruptcy Court) to find out its mailing matrix requirements, as well as other required forms. Such requirements are typically found in a list of local rules.
If you're lucky, your court may publish a special procedural guide specifically for debtors who are filing without a lawyer. Until recently, most courts, however, did not offer this kind of information on their web sites. That has changed a lot in the past few years and several courts offer very good information.
Each district court has its own preferred format for the mailing matrix -- a list of of creditors that you must supply when you file, formatted in a certain way so that the court can scan it.
Matrix requirements can be found in the local rules or sometimes a separate instruction sheet available on the website.
Your court may also have a local requirements regarding any reaffirmation agreement you make with a creditor. Courts review such agreements closely to make sure the creditor is not ripping you off and that one creditor is not benefiting at the expense of others.
Request for Transcript of Tax Return (IRS 4506-T)
The U.S. Federal Bankruptcy Courts website offers a fairly decent, plain-English glossary of bankruptcy terminology, which can be helpful when reading local rules and forms.
Instructions are harder to come by than they used to be. The official U.S. Court website offers no instructions with these forms, other except a link to the congressional committee reports that were written at the time the forms were created. These are not step-by-step instructions, but rather a broad description of the purpose of each form.
The legal publisher Nolo publishes a comprehensive bankruptcy form instruction book (which I co-author). This book takes you through each form, line by line, explains what the terminology means, and provides examples. It also alerts you to situations that may require more help.
There are several software products designed for lawyers that will prepare full sets of bankruptcy forms, but these programs assume you already know bankruptcy law and are designed for filing multiple bankruptcies. In short, they're not appropriate for first-time bankruptcy filers.
There are also a few packages purportedly offered for consumers. Proceed with caution. Some of these packages are little more than PDF versions of the forms, which are are available free from the courts themselves.
If you are not a lawyer, the only value of these products would depend on the quality of the instructions they provide. You'll need instructions on how to complete each form, as well as a good understanding of how each form fits into the larger process of filing for bankruptcy.
A relative newcomer to online bankruptcy form preparation is a service geared toward self-helpers, called BKParaDox. It has licensed the Nolo bankruptcy book to be used as a resource in conjunction with their online bankruptcy form filling tools. One unique aspect to their product is that they've got an agreement with LegalHelpers, promising to credit the cost of the online form preparation service if, after you've started, you decide you'd rather turn over your case to a lawyer retained via LegalHelpers.
Bankruptcy Petition Preparers (BPPs) are nonlawyers who offer help in filling in the forms. The latest revision of the bankruptcy laws formally recognized these services as legitimate, but also imposed severe restrictions on what they can charge and scope of the services they can perform.
Lawyers have jealously guarded their turf when it comes to bankruptcy. Lawyers already lost this battle in the area of tax preparation. Today, non-lawyer tax preparers openly advertise the good advice they can give you in addition to completing your forms. BPPs can do no such thing when it comes to bankruptcy forms.
Under the new bankruptcy law, BPPs must give debtors a form that lists all the things BPPs can't do (form 19B), and all the topics they can't discuss -- basically anything that might be characterized as legal advice. Thus, the sort of tips that tax preparers commonly give to people when preparing their taxes, BPPs can't give when bankruptcy forms. (Some believe this raises profound First Amendment and restraint of trade issues.)
How to File For Chapter 7 Bankruptcy (HFB book) will not give you specific advice, either, but it does discuss important facts to consider in making the kinds of decisions listed the following table:
| What BPPs can't do (language of Form B 19) | Plain English | Where topic is covered in HFB Book. |
| I am forbidden to offer you any legal advice, including advice about any of the following: |
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| • whether to file a petition under the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C. § 101 et seq.); | Whether you should file for bankruptcy | Ch. 1 (free sample chapter) |
| • whether commencing a case under chapter 7, 11, 12, or 13 is appropriate; | What kind of bankruptcy you should file for | Ch. 1 (free sample chapter) |
| • whether your debts will be eliminated or discharged in a case under the Bankruptcy Code; | Which debts are non-dischargeable, secured, etc. | Ch's. 9, 5 |
| • whether you will be able to retain your home, car,
or other property after commencing a case under the Bankruptcy Code; |
Whether you'll lose your house, car, or other property | Chs. 3, 4, 5 |
| • concerning the tax consequences of a case brought under the Bankruptcy Code; | Tax consequences | Not covered |
| • concerning the dischargeability of tax claims; | Whether or not your tax debts will be wiped out | Ch. 9 |
| • whether you may or should promise to repay debts
to a creditor or enter into a reaffirmation agreement with a creditor to reaffirm a debt; |
Which secured loans are worth hanging onto, versus other options (e.g. surrendering property) | Ch. 5 |
| • concerning how to characterize the nature of your interests in property or your debts; or | Whether property is exempt or into which exemption category a particular item fits |
Ch. 3, 4 |
| • concerning bankruptcy procedures and rights. |
What happens in bankruptcy; what are your rights | Whole book |
The links below connect you to forms provided by the US Court system. All bankruptcy forms available for free as Adobe Acrobat (PDF) forms.
Official instructions for most of the revised Official
Bankruptcy Forms are not available because they are "under
revision." It has been many months since these new forms
were first published and there's no word on when the instructions
will be available. Links to the revised instructions will be
posted here as they are available. The only instructional text
posted are the committee notes from the congressional committees
that wrote the law creating these forms.
| B 1 | Voluntary Petition (4/10) Exhibit "A" (9/97) | Exhibit "C" (9/01) | Exhibit "D" (12/09) | Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 2 | Declaration under Penalty of Perjury on Behalf
of a Corporation or Partnership Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 3A | Application and Order to Pay Filing Fee in
Installments (12/07)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 3B | Application for Waiver of Chapter 7 Filing Fee
(12/07)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 4 | List of Creditors Holding 20 Largest Unsecured
Claims (12/07) Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 5 | Involuntary Petition (12/07)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
The Schedules:Where you list
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| B6 | Cover Sheet for Schedules (12/07) |
| B6 | Summary of Schedules (Includes Statistical Summary of Certain Liabilities)(12/07) |
| B 6A | Schedule A - Real Property (12/07)
Instructions | Committee Notes (6A-J) |
| B 6B | Schedule B - Personal Property (12/07)
Instructions |
Exemptions |
|
| B 6C | Schedule C - Property Claimed as Exempt (4/10)
Instructions |
Secured Debts |
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| B 6D | Schedule D - Creditors Holding Secured Claims
(12/07)
Instructions |
Unsecured Debts |
|
| B 6E | Schedule E - Creditors Holding Unsecured
Priority Claims (4/10)
Instructions |
| B 6F | Schedule F - Creditors Holding Unsecured Nonpriority Claims (12/07)
Instructions |
Contracts & Leases |
|
| B 6G | Schedule G - Executory
Contracts and Unexpired Leases (12/07)
Instructions |
Codebtors |
|
| B 6H | Schedule H - Codebtors
(12/07)
Instructions |
Your Income & Expenses |
|
| B 6I | Schedule I - Current Income of Individual
Debtor(s) (12/07)
Instructions |
| B 6J | Schedule J- Current Expenditures of Individual
Debtor(s) (12/07) Instructions |
| B 6 | Declaration Concerning Debtor's Schedules
(12/07) Instructions |
Your Debts |
|
| B 7 | Statement of Financial Affairs (4/10)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
How to handle your secured debts |
|
| B 8 | Chapter 7 Individual Debtor's Statement
of Intention (12/08)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 9 | Notice of Commencement of Case under the Bankruptcy
Code, Meeting of Creditors, and Deadlines (09/97)
Instructions (9A - 9I) | Committee Notes (9A-I) |
| B 9A | Chapter 7 Individual or Joint Debtor No Asset Case (12/07) |
| B 9B | Chapter 7 Corporation/Partnership No Asset Case (12/07) |
| B 9C | Chapter 7 Individual or Joint Debtor Asset Case (12/07) |
| B 9D | Chapter 7 Corporation/Partnership Asset Case (12/07) |
| B 9E | Chapter 11 Individual or Joint Debtor Case (12/07) |
| B 9E(Alt.) | Chapter 11 Individual or Joint Debtor Case (12/07) |
| B 9F | Chapter 11 Corporation/Partnership Case (12/08) |
| B 9F(Alt.) | Chapter 11 Corporation/Partnership Case (12/07) |
| B 9G | Chapter 12 Individual or Joint Debtor Family Farmer (12/07) |
| B 9H | Chapter 12 Corporation/Partnership Family Farmer (12/07) |
| B 9I | Chapter 13 Case (12/07) |
Proof of Claim |
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| B 10 | Proof Of Claim (4/10)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 11A | General Power of Attorney (06/90)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 11B | Special Power of Attorney (06/90)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 12 | Order and Notice for Hearing on Disclosure
Statement (12/03) Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 13 | Order Approving Disclosure Statement and
Fixing Time for Filing Acceptances or
Rejections of Plan, Combined with Notice Thereof (12/03)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 14 | Ballot for Accepting or Rejecting Plan
(12/03)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 15 | Order Confirming Plan (12/01) Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 16A | Caption (12/07)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 16B | Caption (Short Title) (12/94)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 16C | [Abrogated] (12/03) Committee Notes |
| B 16D | Caption for Use in Adversary Proceeding
other than for a Complaint Filed by a Debtor (12/04)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 17 | Notice of Appeal under 28 U.S.C. ยง158(a)
or (b) from a Judgment, Order or Decree of a Bankruptcy Court (12/04)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 18 | Discharge of Debtor (12/07) Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 19 | Declaration and Signature of Non-Attorney
Bankruptcy Petition Preparer (12/07)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 20A | Notice of Motion or Objection (12/03) Instructions | Committee Notes (20A-B) |
| B 20B | Notice of Objection to Claim (12/03) Instructions |
| B 21 | Statement of Social Security Number (12/07)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
Means Test FormsChapter 7 Means Test |
|
| B 22A | Statement of Current Monthly Income and Means
Test Calculation (Chapter 7)(4/10)
Instructions | Committee Notes (22A-C) |
| B 22B | Statement of Current Monthly
Income (Chapter 11) (1/08) Instructions |
Chapter 13 Means Test |
|
| B 22C | Statement of Current Monthly
Income and Calculation of Commitment Period and Disposable Income (Chapter
13) (4/10)
Instructions |
| B 23 | Debtor's Certification of Completion
of Instructional Course Concerning Financial Management (12/08)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 24 | Certification to Court of Appeals (12/07)
Instructions | Committee Notes |
| B 25A | Plan of Reorganization in Small Business Case under Chapter 11
(12/08)
Instructions | Committee Note |
| B 25B | Disclosure Statement in Small Business Case under Chapter 11 (12/08) Instructions | Committee Note |
| B 25C | Small Business Monthly Operating Report (12/08)
Committee Note |
| B 26 | Periodic Report Regarding Value, Operations and Profitability of
Entities in Which the Debtor's Estate Holds a Substantial or Controlling
Interest (12/08)
Instructions | Committee Note |
| B 27 | Reaffirmation Agreement Cover Sheet (12/09) Instructions | Committee Note |
Can't find what you're looking for? Additional forms can be found at the official forms page forms provided by the US Court system. All bankruptcy forms available for free as Adobe Acrobat (PDF) forms.