Ninth Circuit · Alaska

United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Alaska

United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Alaska has processed 20,502 federal bankruptcy filings in the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database, ranking 91st of 94 US bankruptcy districts by total case volume, with Chapter 7 accounting for 67.54% of classified filings.

Data updated . Methodology & sources.
20,502Total cases (FJC IDB)
315FY 2025 filings
30.28%Chapter 13 share
67.54%Chapter 7 share
13.09%Prior-filer rate (Ch 13)
35.41%RECAP coverage

National rank: 91st of 94 by total case volume (4th percentile). See all rankings below.

Section 01Filing Volume

Annual federal bankruptcy filings in D. Alaska, FY 2010–2026. The most recent fiscal year is rendered with a muted marker to indicate its incomplete status.

FY2010: 2,259 filingsFY2011: 1,856 filingsFY2012: 1,566 filingsFY2013: 1,161 filingsFY2014: 861 filingsFY2015: 860 filingsFY2016: 732 filingsFY2017: 812 filingsFY2018: 843 filingsFY2019: 752 filingsFY2020: 570 filingsFY2021: 400 filingsFY2022: 330 filingsFY2023: 368 filingsFY2024: 356 filingsFY2025: 315 filingsFY2026: 66 filings (incomplete — current FY)2010201220142016201820202022202420262,2590

Section 02Chapter Mix

Distribution of cases filed in D. Alaska by bankruptcy chapter. Computed over the 20,502 cases with a non-blank chapter code in the FJC IDB.

Chapter 7: 13,848 cases (67.5%)Ch 7 67.5%Chapter 13: 6,209 cases (30.3%)Ch 13 30.3%Chapter 11: 387 cases (1.9%)Chapter 12: 35 cases (0.2%)Chapter 15: 22 cases (0.1%)
Chapter 7 — Liquidation (67.5%, 13,848 cases) Chapter 13 — Wage-earner plan (30.3%, 6,209 cases) Chapter 11 — Reorganization (1.9%, 387 cases) Chapter 12 — Family farmer / fisherman (0.2%, 35 cases) Chapter 15 — Cross-border / ancillary (0.1%, 22 cases)
ChapterPurposeCasesShare
Chapter 7Liquidation13,84867.54%
Chapter 13Wage-earner plan6,20930.28%
Chapter 11Reorganization3871.89%
Chapter 12Family farmer / fisherman350.17%
Chapter 15Cross-border / ancillary220.11%

Section 03Case Dispositions

Of cases filed in D. Alaska from FY 2005 onward, 10,077 have a terminal disposition recorded in the FJC Integrated Database (52.0% of 19,364 in-window cases). 9,287 remain unclassified — either still open at the last FJC extract or not yet coded.

Percentages reflect cases with a terminal disposition coded in the FJC Integrated Database. Blank dispositions (cases still open, or outcomes not yet coded at the last FJC extract) are counted separately in "unclassified" and excluded from the percentage denominator. This is typical of IDB coverage; see the methodology page for detail.
Discharged: 8,712 (86.5%)86.5%Dismissed: 938 (9.3%)9.3%Converted to another chapter: 354 (3.5%)Other disposition: 73 (0.7%)
Discharged (86.5%, 8,712 cases) Dismissed (9.3%, 938 cases) Converted to another chapter (3.5%, 354 cases) Other disposition (0.7%, 73 cases)
OutcomeCasesShare of classified
Discharged8,71286.45%
Dismissed9389.31%
Converted to another chapter3543.51%
Other disposition730.72%

Section 04Prior-Filer Rate (Chapter 13)

Of Chapter 13 cases in D. Alaska with a coded prior-filing flag in the FJC IDB, 13.09% (755 cases) carry a recorded prior bankruptcy filing. This metric is relevant to 11 U.S.C. § 1328(f) discharge eligibility.

National rank on Chapter 13 prior-filer rate: 91st of 94 (4th percentile).

Classified subset: 5,769 of 6,209 Chapter 13 cases. How this is computed.

Section 05Pro Se Filing Rate

Of classified D. Alaska filings, 10.11% (1,949 cases) were filed without an attorney of record.

National rank on pro se rate: 9th of 94 (92th percentile).

Classified subset: 19,274 of 20,502 cases. How this is computed.

Section 06National Rank

How D. Alaska compares to the other 93 US federal bankruptcy districts on the metrics above. A higher percentile indicates a higher value of the metric (e.g., 95th percentile on total volume means top 5% by case count).

Total case volume
Rank 91 of 94 (4th percentile)
Chapter 13 volume
Rank 91 of 94 (4th percentile)
Prior-filer rate (Ch 13)
Rank 91 of 94 (4th percentile)
Pro se rate
Rank 9 of 94 (92th percentile)

Section 07Peer Districts

Three districts in the Ninth Circuit closest in total case volume to D. Alaska.

Section 08Courthouse & Divisions

Primary courthouse location as published on https://www.akb.uscourts.gov.

United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Alaska
605 W. 4th Ave, Suite 138, Anchorage, AK 99501

Court website ↗

Section 09Privacy Rule (FRBP 9037) Context

Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9037 requires that Social Security Numbers, dates of birth, financial account numbers, and minor-child identifiers be redacted in bankruptcy filings. The Federal Judicial Center’s April 2024 empirical study, Unredacted Social Security Numbers in Federal Court PACER Documents, measured compliance across the federal court system.

National findings (Garri et al., 2024): In 37 randomly selected days of 2022 PACER filings, researchers identified 22,391 unredacted Social Security Numbers affecting approximately 8,300 individuals across 3,521 cases. 72% of identified SSNs appear noncompliant with the privacy rules. In proof-of-claim filings specifically, the noncompliance rate is 98%.

A small number of documents account for a disproportionate share of exposure: 45% of unredacted SSNs (10,042) appeared in just 17 documents, which the authors frame as evidence of systemic actors rather than widespread filer error. The study also documented 54 violations involving Bankruptcy Form 121 — the form the court tells debtors “will not make publicly available.”

The Federal Judicial Center’s findings are not broken out by district, and OBP does not publish per-district compliance rates. The FJC study measures appearance of noncompliance, not adjudicated Rule 9037 violations. See the methodology page for why that distinction matters.

Primary source: Unredacted Social Security Numbers in Federal Court PACER Documents (FJC, April 2024).

Section 10RECAP Coverage

Of the 20,502 cases recorded for D. Alaska in the FJC IDB, 7,260 dockets (35.41%) are available free of charge in the Free Law Project’s RECAP Archive. Every case link on this site resolves to a free CourtListener page — no PACER fee, no paywall, no login required.

If the coverage number is lower than you’d expect, you can help. Installing the free RECAP browser extension contributes any PACER documents you already pay for to the public archive, at no cost to you.

Section 11Frequently Asked Questions

How many federal bankruptcy cases have been filed in D. Alaska?

According to the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database, 20,502 cases have been filed in United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Alaska. D. Alaska ranks 91 of 94 US bankruptcy districts by total filing volume (4th percentile).

What is the chapter mix of bankruptcy filings in D. Alaska?

Of classified filings in D. Alaska: Chapter 13 accounts for 30.28% (6,209 cases), Chapter 7 for 67.54% (13,848 cases). The remaining filings consist of Chapter 11 reorganizations, Chapter 12 family farmer cases, and occasional cross-border proceedings.

What happens to bankruptcy cases in D. Alaska?

Of 10,077 cases with recorded outcomes (filed FY 2005 onward), 86.45% ended in discharge and 9.31% in dismissal. The remaining cases were converted to a different chapter or closed for other reasons. Cases still open at the last FJC extract are counted separately and excluded from these percentages.

What is the prior-filer rate on Chapter 13 cases in D. Alaska?

Of Chapter 13 cases in D. Alaska with prior-filing flags coded, 13.09% had a recorded prior bankruptcy filing. This metric is relevant to 11 U.S.C. § 1328(f) and refiling screening; see the methodology page for detail on how the flag is assigned.

What percentage of bankruptcy cases in D. Alaska are filed pro se?

Of D. Alaska filings with representation status coded, 10.11% were filed without an attorney of record.

How many D. Alaska cases are available in the free RECAP Archive?

CourtListener's RECAP Archive contains 7,260 dockets for D. Alaska, representing 35.41% of FJC IDB-counted cases in this district. RECAP is operated by the Free Law Project; see free.law for attribution and how to contribute.