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File Bankruptcy Without a Lawyer in Maryland [2026]: Courts, Fees, and Procedure

State-specific rules, federal court data, and practical guidance for Maryland residents.

Filing Bankruptcy Pro Se in Maryland - Quick Orientation

Bankruptcy is federal. All Maryland pro se filings go to a federal bankruptcy court, not a state court. You retain the 28 U.S.C. Section 1654 right to self-representation for individual cases (Chapter 7 and Chapter 13). Corporations and LLCs cannot file pro se per Rowland.

ItemMaryland Detail
Bankruptcy districtsDistrict of Maryland
Main courthouses101 W. Lombard St., Baltimore (BMD); 6500 Cherrywood Ln, Greenbelt (GMD)
Filing notes2 divisional offices.
Chapter 7 filing fee$338 (2026)
Chapter 13 filing fee$313 (2026)
Chapter 11 filing fee$1,738 (consumer)

Venue - Where to File in Maryland

Federal bankruptcy venue is governed by 28 U.S.C. Section 1408. File in the district where you have:

  • Domicile, residence, or principal place of business for the greater part of the 180 days immediately preceding filing, OR
  • Principal assets for the same period, OR
  • An affiliated pending case.

Maryland venue note: 2 divisional offices.

Maryland Filing Fees (2026) and Fee Waivers

ChapterFiling FeeMiscellaneous
Chapter 7$338Waiver possible if income < 150% of poverty line (Form 103B)
Chapter 13$313Installment payments available (up to 4 per Rule 1006)
Chapter 11 (consumer)$1,738No waiver; installments possible
Chapter 12 (family farmer)$278Installments possible
Credit counseling$15-$50Pre-filing, 180-day validity, sliding scale available
Debtor education$15-$50Post-filing, pre-discharge

Additional fees (amendments, motions, reopening) are set by the U.S. Judicial Conference and published on uscourts.gov.

Maryland E-Filing vs Paper Filing for Pro Se

Most Maryland bankruptcy courts require paper filing for pro se debtors. CM/ECF (the electronic filing system) is generally reserved for licensed attorneys admitted to the district, though some districts offer limited pro se e-filing with pre-approval.

Practical Maryland pro se filing workflow:

  1. Download all national Official Forms from uscourts.gov.
  2. Download the Maryland district's Local Rules and local forms from the district's website.
  3. Complete forms. Wet-ink signature on originals where required.
  4. Make 3 copies (court, trustee, your file).
  5. Pay the filing fee (cashier's check, money order, or in-person credit card if court accepts).
  6. File in person or by mail to the clerk's office at one of the courthouses above.

See DIY bankruptcy walkthrough.

Required Forms for Maryland Pro Se Filing

Every pro se Chapter 7 or 13 filing in Maryland includes the following minimum set:

  • Voluntary Petition - Form 101 (individual) or 201 (entity, but pro se not allowed).
  • Schedules A/B through J - assets, debts, income, expenses.
  • Statement of Financial Affairs - Form 107.
  • Means Test - Form 122A-1 (Chapter 7) or 122C-1 (Chapter 13).
  • Statement of Intention - Form 108 (Chapter 7 only).
  • Chapter 13 Plan - Form 113 (Chapter 13 only).
  • Credit counseling certificate - dated within 180 days before filing.
  • Pay stubs - 60 days before filing (or Form 121 certification if none).
  • Tax return - most recent year's federal tax return; must be provided to the trustee at least 7 days before 341 meeting.
  • Creditor matrix - mailing addresses in the court's required format.

Maryland districts may require local cover sheets and additional local forms. See Chapter 7 checklist and Chapter 13 checklist.

Maryland 341 Meeting of Creditors

After filing, the court sets a 341 meeting (meeting of creditors) 20-40 days out. In Maryland:

  • Attendance is mandatory. Missing the 341 is a leading cause of dismissal.
  • Format varies. Many Maryland districts now use telephonic or video 341 meetings post-2020; some have returned to in-person. Check the notice carefully.
  • You answer under oath. The trustee asks standard questions about your schedules, income, and financial situation.
  • Duration: Typically 5-15 minutes for a no-asset Chapter 7; longer for contested matters or Chapter 13.
  • Bring photo ID and Social Security card (or W-2 showing SSN).

Maryland Federal Bankruptcy Data

Maryland's federal bankruptcy courts handle both attorney-filed and pro se cases under the same rules. The FJC numbers below give you a sense of Maryland docket scale and outcomes.

Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 559 consumer bankruptcy cases from Maryland's federal bankruptcy courts.

ChapterCases FiledDischarge RateDismissal Rate
Chapter 742097.4%0.0%
Chapter 13139n/an/a

Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.

Bankruptcy Petition Preparers (BPPs) in Maryland

BPPs are non-lawyers who type bankruptcy petitions for a fee under 11 U.S.C. Section 110. In Maryland:

  • A BPP may type the forms you direct but cannot advise you on the law.
  • BPP fees are regulated; in most districts capped at $200-$225.
  • The BPP must sign the petition and disclose their identity (name, address, SSN or EIN).
  • BPPs are subject to sanctions for legal advice or for failing to disclose.
  • BPPs differ from licensed attorneys in that they cannot: (a) advise on exemptions, (b) advise on chapter choice, (c) represent you in court, (d) draft a Chapter 13 plan.

A BPP is useful if you can read and complete the forms yourself but want help with formatting. A BPP is not a substitute for legal advice. See full BPP guide.

Common Maryland Pro Se Mistakes

  • Forgetting a creditor. Missing a creditor from the matrix can mean that debt is not discharged.
  • Undervaluing assets. The trustee will check; undervaluation looks like concealment.
  • Overlooking the Maryland exemption election. Schedule C must affirmatively claim each exemption.
  • Missing the 60-day pay advice rule. Employer-issued pay stubs for 60 days pre-filing are required.
  • Filing without credit counseling certificate. The certificate must pre-date the petition.
  • Missing Rule 9037 redactions. Full SSNs, account numbers, and minor names trigger clerk alerts and must be re-filed.

See full mistake list.

Our research was cited by the federal judiciary as Suggestions 26-BK-3 and 26-BK-5