A debtor just filed bankruptcy, and you're holding unpaid invoices. Now what? You've got one shot to recover what you're owed—and it starts with filing a proof of claim. Miss this step, and the court won't distribute a single dollar to you, regardless of how legitimate your debt is.
Here's the reality: bankruptcy doesn't work like normal collections. You can't just send demand letters or make phone calls. The court controls everything through a structured process with hard deadlines. Some creditors recover substantial amounts. Others get nothing. The difference usually comes down to understanding the rules and acting fast.
We'll walk through exactly what you need to do—from filling out the right forms to knowing which claims get paid first. Whether you're owed $500 or $500,000, this process determines your recovery.
Picture walking into a courtroom where the judge is dividing up a debtor's money among dozens of creditors. Your proof of claim? That's your hand raised saying "I'm owed money too." Without raising that hand, you're invisible to the court.
This document does three things. First, it tells the bankruptcy trustee your debt exists. Second, it specifies exactly how much the debtor owes you. Third, it labels what kind of creditor you are—which matters enormously for who gets paid first.
The trustee reviews every filed claim to figure out where the money goes. They're checking whether debts are real, calculating who holds priority, and ca...