Your right to file pro se
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1654, any party to a civil action has the right to appear pro se -- meaning you represent yourself without an attorney. This right extends to bankruptcy court. No judge can deny you the ability to file your own case.
That said, pro se bankruptcy is not for everyone. It works best when your case is straightforward: simple debts, no significant assets, no business complications, and no contested creditor disputes. The more complex your situation, the more valuable an attorney becomes.
28 U.S.C. § 1654: "In all courts of the United States the parties may plead and conduct their own cases personally or by counsel."
Note: Under 11 U.S.C. § 304(g), corporations and LLCs cannot file pro se -- they must be represented by an attorney. Only individuals can represent themselves.
Explore the guide
We built a separate page for every major step and question. Start where you need:
Chapter 7 Pro Se
Step-by-step guide to filing Chapter 7 without a lawyer. The most common pro se chapter.
Chapter 13 Pro Se
Why Chapter 13 pro se is harder, what it involves, and when to consider it anyway.
Forms Guide
Every official bankruptcy form you need, where to get them, and how to fill them out.
Filing Fees
How much it costs, fee waiver eligibility, and installment payment options.
Credit Counseling
The two mandatory courses -- what they are, where to take them, and what they cost.
341 Meeting Prep
Preparing for the meeting of creditors without an attorney. What to expect and what to bring.
Common Mistakes
The errors that get pro se cases dismissed -- and how to avoid every one of them.
FAQ
Answers to the questions pro se filers ask most, from eligibility to discharge timeline.
Chapter 7 vs Chapter 13 pro se -- at a glance
| Factor | Chapter 7 Pro Se | Chapter 13 Pro Se |
|---|---|---|
| Difficulty level | Moderate | Very difficult |
| Filing fee | $338 | $313 |
| Time to discharge | 3-4 months | 3-5 years |
| Plan required? | No | Yes -- the hardest part |
| Pro se success rate | Reasonable (simple cases) | Low (high dismissal rate) |
| Fee waiver available? | Yes | No |
| Court appearances | Just the 341 meeting | 341 meeting + confirmation hearing |
The pro se filing checklist
- Complete pre-filing credit counseling (required within 180 days before filing) -- details
- Gather financial documents: tax returns (2 years), pay stubs (6 months), bank statements, loan statements, vehicle titles, property deeds
- Complete all official bankruptcy forms -- forms guide
- Take the means test (Chapter 7) or draft your repayment plan (Chapter 13)
- File with the bankruptcy court clerk (in person or electronically where available) and pay the filing fee
- Attend the 341 meeting of creditors -- preparation guide
- Complete post-filing debtor education course (required before discharge)
- Receive your discharge (Chapter 7: ~60 days after 341 meeting; Chapter 13: after plan completion)
When you should NOT file pro se: If you have a business, own real estate with equity, face creditor lawsuits, have non-dischargeable debts you need to negotiate, need to protect a codebtor, or have previously filed bankruptcy -- consult an attorney. The cost of mistakes in these situations almost always exceeds the cost of legal fees.
Free help exists. Many bankruptcy courts have pro se assistance programs. Legal aid organizations offer free bankruptcy help to low-income filers. Law school clinics provide supervised legal assistance. Check your local bankruptcy court's website for pro se resources -- most have them.