Prepare Bankruptcy Exhibits
in 20 Minutes
341 meetings, adversary proceedings, plan confirmations—organize your exhibits for any bankruptcy court proceeding.
Try Free - Prepare Your First Bankruptcy Exhibit SetThe 341 meeting is tomorrow...
Tax returns for 2 years need organization
Bank statements need chronological labeling
Pay stubs and income documentation
Everything needs to be ready for the trustee
Chapter-Specific Workflows
Chapter 7
- • 341 meeting documentation
- • Asset documentation
- • Income/expense verification
- • Exemption support
Typical: 20-40 exhibits
Chapter 13
- • Plan confirmation exhibits
- • Income documentation (means test)
- • Budget verification
- • Feasibility evidence
Typical: 30-50 exhibits
Chapter 11
- • Disclosure statement exhibits
- • Plan exhibits
- • Monthly operating reports
- • Creditor communications
Typical: 50-200+ exhibits
Adversary Proceedings
- • Complaint/answer documentation
- • Discovery materials
- • Trial exhibits
- • Mirrors civil litigation workflow
Variable exhibit counts
341 Meeting Preparation
"The trustee requests specific documentation..."
Ready for trustee review in 20 minutes
Common 341 Meeting Documents
Income Documentation
- Tax returns (2 years)
- Pay stubs (6 months)
- Social Security statements
- Self-employment records
Asset Documentation
- Bank statements (6 months)
- Vehicle titles/registrations
- Real estate documents
- Investment account statements
Adversary Proceeding? Same Workflow as Civil Litigation
"This is going to trial in bankruptcy court..."
- Same workflow as district court litigation
- Duplicate detection prevents exhibit errors
- Combined exhibit binder with table of contents
What Bankruptcy Exhibit Prep Really Costs
| Approach | Cost | Time per Case |
|---|---|---|
| Manual preparation | $175-350 paralegal time | 2-4 hours |
| Adobe Acrobat Pro | $240/year + labor | 1-2 hours |
| ExhibitPrep | $14.99 day pass | 20 minutes |
High-volume practices: one day pass covers multiple 341 meetings
Frequently Asked Questions
What exhibits do I need for a 341 meeting?
Typical 341 meeting exhibits include: tax returns (2 years), pay stubs (6 months), bank statements (6 months), vehicle titles, real estate documents, and proof of insurance. ExhibitPrep helps you organize all these documents with clear exhibit labels.
How do I organize Chapter 11 plan exhibits?
Chapter 11 plan exhibits typically include disclosure statement attachments, financial projections, creditor lists, and supporting schedules. Use ExhibitPrep to label and combine these into a comprehensive exhibit package with table of contents.
Can I use this for adversary proceedings?
Yes. Adversary proceedings follow standard civil litigation exhibit rules. ExhibitPrep provides the same professional exhibit stamping used in district court trials—sequential labeling, consistent formatting, and combined exhibit binders.
What labeling format do bankruptcy trustees prefer?
Most bankruptcy trustees prefer simple sequential numbering (Exhibit 1, 2, 3) or categorical organization (Exhibit A-Income, Exhibit B-Assets). ExhibitPrep supports customizable prefixes and numbering schemes.
Can I prepare exhibits for multiple cases in one day?
Yes. The $14.99 day pass gives you 24 hours of unlimited exhibit stamping. High-volume bankruptcy practices can prepare exhibits for multiple 341 meetings or court hearings in a single session.
How do I handle large document sets (100+ exhibits)?
ExhibitPrep handles large document sets efficiently. Upload all files at once, use drag-and-drop to arrange them, and batch-stamp the entire set. For Chapter 11 cases with extensive exhibits, the combined PDF feature creates an organized binder with navigation.
Related Resources
Your Next Bankruptcy Case, Organized
From 341 meetings to adversary proceedings—professional exhibits every time.
Start Preparing Your ExhibitsExhibitPrep is a document preparation tool. This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult with qualified legal counsel regarding specific bankruptcy court requirements in your jurisdiction.