Filing Bankruptcy Pro Se in Montana - Quick Orientation
Bankruptcy is federal. All Montana 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.
| Item | Montana Detail |
|---|---|
| Bankruptcy districts | District of Montana |
| Main courthouses | 400 N. Main, Butte, MT 59701 |
| Filing notes | Single district; Butte courthouse. |
| Chapter 7 filing fee | $338 (2026) |
| Chapter 13 filing fee | $313 (2026) |
| Chapter 11 filing fee | $1,738 (consumer) |
Venue - Where to File in Montana
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.
Montana venue note: Single district; Butte courthouse.
Montana Filing Fees (2026) and Fee Waivers
| Chapter | Filing Fee | Miscellaneous |
|---|---|---|
| Chapter 7 | $338 | Waiver possible if income < 150% of poverty line (Form 103B) |
| Chapter 13 | $313 | Installment payments available (up to 4 per Rule 1006) |
| Chapter 11 (consumer) | $1,738 | No waiver; installments possible |
| Chapter 12 (family farmer) | $278 | Installments possible |
| Credit counseling | $15-$50 | Pre-filing, 180-day validity, sliding scale available |
| Debtor education | $15-$50 | Post-filing, pre-discharge |
Additional fees (amendments, motions, reopening) are set by the U.S. Judicial Conference and published on uscourts.gov.
Montana E-Filing vs Paper Filing for Pro Se
Most Montana 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 Montana pro se filing workflow:
- Download all national Official Forms from uscourts.gov.
- Download the Montana district's Local Rules and local forms from the district's website.
- Complete forms. Wet-ink signature on originals where required.
- Make 3 copies (court, trustee, your file).
- Pay the filing fee (cashier's check, money order, or in-person credit card if court accepts).
- File in person or by mail to the clerk's office at one of the courthouses above.
Required Forms for Montana Pro Se Filing
Every pro se Chapter 7 or 13 filing in Montana 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.
Montana districts may require local cover sheets and additional local forms. See Chapter 7 checklist and Chapter 13 checklist.
Montana 341 Meeting of Creditors
After filing, the court sets a 341 meeting (meeting of creditors) 20-40 days out. In Montana:
- Attendance is mandatory. Missing the 341 is a leading cause of dismissal.
- Format varies. Many Montana 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).
Bankruptcy Petition Preparers (BPPs) in Montana
BPPs are non-lawyers who type bankruptcy petitions for a fee under 11 U.S.C. Section 110. In Montana:
- 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 Montana 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 Montana 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.