North Dakota Bankruptcy

North Dakota Bankruptcy Exemptions

When a North Dakota debtor files Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, the exemptions in the state’s Century Code decide what they keep and what stays within reach. North Dakota has opted out of the federal exemption set, so a debtor here claims state-law protections, and the state offers an unusual choice between an additional cash exemption and a larger alternative election. For a creditor, the question is never what the exemptions shield; it is what falls outside them, what was never listed, and what moved before filing. This guide walks the North Dakota figures that matter and shows where lawful recovery actually lives.

Opt-Out State Non-Exempt Assets Found Since 2004
100KND Homestead Cap
Opt-OutNo Federal Set
7,500Alternative Election
Since 2004Asset Research

The Short Version

North Dakota is an opt-out state, so a debtor who files bankruptcy here uses the exemptions in the North Dakota Century Code, not the federal list. The headline protections are a homestead exemption capped at 100,000 dollars in equity, a 7,500-dollar wildcard-style alternative exemption a debtor can elect in place of certain specific personal-property exemptions, exempt wages, qualified retirement accounts, and a set of itemized personal-property categories. What the schedules do not protect is what matters to a creditor: home equity above the cap, a second property, non-retirement investment and bank balances, oil and mineral royalty income, business interests, vehicles over the allowance, and anything quietly transferred before filing. We document the full asset picture so the trustee and your counsel can see what is actually reachable.

Watch: North Dakota Bankruptcy Exemptions

What a debtor keeps, and what a creditor can still pursue.

▶ Video Overview

North Dakota Is an Opt-Out State

Why the federal exemption list is off the table here.

The Bankruptcy Code lets each state decide whether its residents may choose the federal exemption set or must use the state’s own. North Dakota has opted out, which means a debtor who files in the District of North Dakota claims the exemptions written into the North Dakota Century Code, principally chapters 28-22 and 47-18, plus the federal non-bankruptcy protections that apply everywhere, such as Social Security and most ERISA-qualified retirement plans. The federal menu in 11 U.S.C. 522(d) simply is not available to a North Dakota filer.

That matters to a creditor because North Dakota’s figures are their own and do not match a neighbor’s. A debtor who recently moved to Fargo or Bismarck may still be bound by a former state’s exemptions under the 730-day domicile rule, and the homestead piece carries its own 1,215-day look-back for equity built up shortly before filing. The first job in any case is confirming which state’s scheme actually governs, because applying the wrong one inflates what looks protected and hides what is reachable. We document residency history and acquisition dates so counsel can test the exemption claim against the real timeline.

What North Dakota Protects, and the Caps

The figures a debtor relies on, and where each one runs out.

ExemptionNorth Dakota LimitWhere It Runs Out
HomesteadUp to 100,000 dollars in equity in a dwelling the debtor occupies.Equity above 100,000 dollars, a second home, vacant land, or rental property.
Motor VehicleRoughly 2,950 dollars in one vehicle (higher if modified for a disability).Equity above the allowance, additional vehicles, recreational units.
Additional / Alternative ElectionEither an extra 3,750 dollars in any property, or the larger 7,500-dollar alternative in lieu of certain specific exemptions.The debtor picks one path; the other category’s value is no longer shielded.
WagesThe greater of 75% of disposable earnings or 40 times federal minimum wage.The non-exempt portion of earnings, plus bonuses and irregular income.
RetirementERISA-qualified plans and IRAs within federal limits.Non-qualified accounts, taxable brokerage, recent excess contributions.
What a Creditor WatchesOil and mineral royalties, business interests, receivables, crypto, cash value.These rarely fit cleanly inside any category — that is the recovery zone.

The dollar figures above are the starting point of a North Dakota exemption analysis, not the end of it. Most of them carry conditions, valuation fights, and the additional-versus-alternative election that a debtor must commit to. A creditor’s leverage is rarely in arguing the cap; it is in the categories the schedules left thin or blank. For the judgment-enforcement version of these same caps outside bankruptcy, see our companion guide to North Dakota asset exemptions for creditors.

The Additional and Alternative Election

A North Dakota quirk that quietly leaves a category exposed.

North Dakota gives a debtor a choice most states do not. On top of the homestead and the itemized personal-property categories, a filer may claim an additional exemption of about 3,750 dollars in any property they choose, available to a head of household. Alternatively, in place of certain specific personal-property exemptions, the debtor may elect a larger alternative exemption of roughly 7,500 dollars. They cannot stack both fully; electing one closes off part of the other.

That election is where a careful read of the schedules pays off. A debtor who grabs the 7,500-dollar alternative to shield a single high-value asset has, by definition, given up the specific exemptions it replaced, leaving those categories exposed. A debtor who instead spreads the smaller additional exemption may leave a concentrated asset only partly covered. Either way, the choice they made tells a creditor exactly which assets are unprotected by their own election. We map the claimed exemptions against the asset inventory so the gap the debtor created becomes obvious to the trustee and your counsel.

Oil and Mineral Royalty Treatment

North Dakota’s signature asset, and how it behaves in a filing.

North Dakota sits over the Bakken, and mineral and royalty interests are a uniquely common asset here, owned by far more ordinary residents than in most states. Those interests do not fit neatly into the homestead or personal-property exemptions, and the income they throw off rarely qualifies as exempt wages. A producing mineral interest is an estate asset, the royalty stream is property of the estate as it accrues, and a non-producing or undivided mineral interest still has value a trustee can market even when the debtor treats it as worthless on the schedules.

This is precisely the category North Dakota debtors most often undervalue or omit. A mineral deed recorded in a county recorder’s office may never make it onto Schedule A/B, or it may be listed at a token value that ignores active leasing and production. Division orders, lease bonuses, and monthly royalty checks leave a documentary trail in county and operator records that a thin schedule will not reflect. We pull recorded mineral conveyances, lease and division-order data, and production-linked payment patterns so the true value of a North Dakota debtor’s mineral estate is on the table rather than buried.

Where North Dakota Recovery Actually Lives

The non-exempt assets that survive a Chapter 7 or 13.

Equity Over the Cap

Home equity above the 100,000-dollar homestead limit is non-exempt, and a second or vacant property is not homestead at all.

Oil and Mineral Royalties

Bakken mineral interests and royalty income seldom fit an exemption and are frequently understated on the schedules.

Business Interests

A farm operation, LLC stake, equipment, or receivables carry value an individual exemption cannot fully shield.

Non-Retirement Cash

Brokerage accounts, non-exempt bank balances, and cash value above the limits remain reachable.

The Election Gap

Whichever exemption path the debtor elected, the category it did not cover is left exposed by their own choice.

Pre-Filing Transfers

Assets moved to relatives or entities shortly before filing can be clawed back as fraudulent transfers or preferences.

None of this is exotic. It is the ordinary gap between what a debtor claims as exempt and what they actually own. Our role is to document that gap with public records, recorded instruments, and lawful database research so the trustee and your counsel can act on assets the schedules glossed over. For the broader framework behind these state caps, see our overview of how bankruptcy exemptions decide what creditors can reach.

From Schedules to a Real Picture

How we test a North Dakota debtor’s exemption claim.

1

Pull the Filing

We read the petition and Schedules A/B, C, and the statement of financial affairs to capture every claimed exemption and value.

2

Map ND Caps

Each claim is tested against the actual North Dakota limits and the additional-versus-alternative election the debtor chose.

3

Search the Records

County recorder, mineral and lease records, entity filings, and licensed databases surface assets the schedules left out.

4

Document the Gap

You receive a dated, sourced report of non-exempt and undisclosed assets to hand the trustee or use at the 341 meeting.

Fraudulent-Transfer Red Flags Before Filing

What the look-back periods are designed to catch.

Exemptions only protect what a debtor actually owns and honestly lists at filing. When assets leave the picture shortly beforehand, the exemption analysis is the wrong lens; the question becomes whether the transfer can be unwound. A North Dakota debtor who deeds a mineral interest to a child for a dollar, pays off one relative’s loan while stiffing every other creditor, or quietly retitles a vehicle in the months before a Chapter 7 has left exactly the kind of trail a trustee can pursue as a fraudulent transfer or preference before bankruptcy.

The classic markers are familiar: transfers to insiders, sales far below market, a sudden flurry of activity right before the petition date, and assets that appear in last year’s records but vanish from the schedules. North Dakota’s homestead carries a 1,215-day look-back on equity moved into a protected residence, and the trustee’s avoidance powers reach preferences and fraudulent transfers within their own statutory windows. Some debtors go further and simply leave value off the schedules entirely, the tactics covered in our guide to how debtors hide assets in bankruptcy and get caught. We compare prior records to the sworn schedules and flag the discrepancies that warrant a closer look.

Who We Help

We document assets; your counsel and the trustee handle the case.

Creditors

Non-exempt assets identified

Creditor Attorneys

Schedules tested against records

Bankruptcy Trustees

Leads on overlooked value

Lenders

Mineral and equity exposure mapped

Judgment Holders

Survival of the debt assessed

Collections Firms

Post-discharge recovery scoped

Whoever you are in a North Dakota filing, the wall is the same: a debtor’s exemptions are only as solid as the asset list behind them. We are a skip-tracing and public-records research firm, not attorneys or trustees; we locate people and document assets lawfully and leave the legal steps to your counsel. Outside bankruptcy, the same research supports North Dakota wage garnishment and other post-judgment enforcement once a debt survives or no case is filed. Send us the petition and what you know, and for a legitimate creditor matter an initial North Dakota asset read typically comes back within 24 hours.

Our Commitment

We document what a North Dakota debtor actually owns — equity over the homestead cap, mineral and royalty interests, business value, and assets moved before filing — so the trustee and your counsel can pursue what is reachable. Lawful, sourced asset research for creditors since 2004.

People Locator Skip Tracing Investigation Team — professional researchers conducting skip tracing and public-records work since 2004, working county records and investigative-grade sources lawfully and for permissible purposes only. Read more about us. Last reviewed 2026. This page is general information, not legal advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a North Dakota debtor use the federal bankruptcy exemptions?

No. North Dakota has opted out of the federal exemption set, so a debtor who files here claims the exemptions in the North Dakota Century Code plus federal non-bankruptcy protections like Social Security and qualified retirement plans. The 11 U.S.C. 522(d) federal menu is unavailable.

How much home equity does the North Dakota homestead exemption protect?

North Dakota’s homestead exemption shields up to 100,000 dollars of equity in a dwelling the debtor occupies. Equity above that cap is non-exempt, and a second home, vacant land, or rental property does not qualify as homestead at all.

What is North Dakota’s additional or alternative exemption?

North Dakota lets a debtor claim an additional exemption of roughly 3,750 dollars in any property, or instead elect a larger alternative exemption of about 7,500 dollars in place of certain specific personal-property exemptions. They cannot fully stack both, so the path they choose leaves the other category exposed.

Are oil and mineral royalties exempt in a North Dakota bankruptcy?

Generally no. Mineral interests and royalty income rarely fit the homestead or personal-property exemptions, so they are usually property of the estate. North Dakota debtors frequently omit or undervalue Bakken mineral interests, which makes recorded mineral and lease records a key place to look.

What assets survive a Chapter 7 or 13 for a creditor to pursue?

Equity above the homestead cap, additional or non-homestead property, oil and mineral royalties, business interests, non-retirement cash and brokerage accounts, vehicles over the allowance, and assets moved before filing are all potentially reachable. We document those non-exempt and undisclosed items.

What are fraudulent-transfer red flags before a North Dakota filing?

Transfers to relatives or entities, sales far below value, paying off one insider while ignoring other creditors, and assets that appear in prior records but vanish from the schedules. North Dakota’s homestead carries a 1,215-day look-back, and trustees can avoid preferences and fraudulent transfers within statutory windows.

Do you handle the bankruptcy case or give legal advice?

No. We are a skip-tracing and public-records research firm. We locate people and document assets lawfully; your attorney and the bankruptcy trustee handle filings, objections, and avoidance actions. This page is general information, not legal advice.

Which state’s exemptions apply if the debtor recently moved to North Dakota?

It depends on the 730-day domicile rule, which can require a recent arrival to use a former state’s exemptions, and the 1,215-day homestead look-back. Confirming residency history is the first step, because applying the wrong scheme overstates what is protected. We document the timeline.

Find What the Schedules Left Out

We test a North Dakota debtor’s claimed exemptions against the records and document the non-exempt and undisclosed assets — equity, minerals, business value, and pre-filing transfers — typically within 24 hours. Contact us to get started.

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