Site Information
Contact Us
Get in touch with the Bankruptcy Information team. Send questions, corrections, or feedback about our bankruptcy guides, tools, and directories.
3 min read · Last verified 2026-07-04
We want to hear from readers who spot an error, have a question about how we cover a topic, or want to suggest something we should add to the site.
How to Reach Us
BankruptcyInformation.com is an independent educational publisher. Email us at contact@bankruptcyinformation.com — it's the best way to flag an error, ask how we cover a topic, or send a data or privacy request, and we read everything that comes in.
We don't list a phone number or mailing address. As an educational publisher rather than a law firm or case-management service, we don't take calls about individual filings, and a street address wouldn't do you any good if you're looking for help with your case.
Questions and Corrections
Most messages we get fall into a few buckets:
- Factual corrections. A statute citation that's out of date, a filing fee that's changed, an exemption amount that no longer matches the current figure.
- Clarity issues. A section that's confusing, contradicts another page, or leaves out a step a reader needed.
- Content requests. A topic, form, or state comparison you expected to find and didn't.
Corrections are the ones we prioritize hardest. Bankruptcy law changes: exemption amounts adjust, fee schedules update, procedural rules shift, and when a reader tells us something is stale, we check it against the source and fix it. See our Editorial Policy for how we source and verify figures across the site.
What We Can and Can't Help With
We can help you find the right guide, point out where a topic is covered in more depth, or take a correction seriously and act on it.
We can't give legal advice, evaluate your specific financial situation, tell you whether to file Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, or refer you to an attorney. Bankruptcy outcomes depend on facts particular to your case — your income, your state's exemptions, what you own, what you owe — and no general-information site can responsibly answer that from an email. If you need advice on your own situation, talk to a licensed bankruptcy attorney or a nonprofit credit counseling agency in your area.
Response Times and What to Expect
Expect a reply for straightforward corrections faster than for open-ended questions, since a correction usually just needs us to verify a figure and update a page. We're a small operation, so we can't guarantee a same-day turnaround, and we won't be able to follow up on questions that amount to a request for legal advice about your case.
Thanks for reading closely enough to send us something worth fixing. That's how we keep the site accurate.