Stretto for debtor-side bankruptcy practice: who it fits, who it doesn't
Stretto is built around trustee and Chapter 11 administration. An honest assessment of whether debtor-side Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 firms get meaningful value.
Stretto has become a well-known name in bankruptcy circles, particularly in large-scale Chapter 11 cases and trustee administration. For debtor-side attorneys handling consumer Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 petitions, however, its role is less clear-cut. This assessment provides an evidence-led look at where Stretto's platform aligns with the needs of a debtor practice and where significant gaps remain, helping you make an informed software decision.
Stretto is primarily a technology and administrative services provider for Chapter 11 trustees, creditors' committees, and large-scale bankruptcy cases. For debtor-side Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 firms, its core petition preparation tools can be functional, but the platform lacks integrated client document collection and data-gathering workflows that are critical for efficient consumer practice management.
Key Takeaways
- Stretto's primary market and strength lies in trustee-side administration and complex Chapter 11 cases, not consumer debtor practice.
- Debtor attorneys can use Stretto's petition software for Chapter 7 and 13 filings, but it requires significant manual workarounds for client data intake.
- Compared to dedicated debtor-side platforms like Best Case Cloud, Stretto often lacks seamless integrations for bank statement analysis and client portals.
- The most significant operational gap for debtor firms using Stretto is the absence of a built-in, secure system for collecting and organizing client documents.
- For solo and small debtor practices, Stretto may only be "worth it" if paired with a separate, cost-effective add-on solution to handle document collection and client communication.
What Stretto Actually Is
Stretto, Inc. is a legal technology company that provides a suite of services centered on bankruptcy case administration and compliance. Its platform is engineered for the complexities of large-scale reorganizations, offering tools for claims management, noticing, balloting, and disbursement for Chapter 11 trustees and committees (Stretto, stretto.com, 2026). This focus on the "administration side" of bankruptcy is a critical distinction. The software's design inherently prioritizes the needs of parties responsible for managing a case post-petition, rather than the pre-petition workflow of an attorney preparing a petition for an individual debtor. While the company does offer a petition preparation product, it is an extension of its core administrative ecosystem, not the foundational purpose of the platform. Understanding this origin is key to evaluating its fit for a debtor-side practice.
Where Stretto Fits for Debtor-Side Firms
Despite its trustee-side focus, Stretto's petition software does contain the functional components necessary to prepare and file a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. It includes the official bankruptcy forms, means test calculators, and electronic filing integration with the court's CM/ECF system (PACER, pacer.uscourts.gov, 2026). For a debtor attorney whose primary need is a reliable, no-frills tool for assembling the schedules and statement of financial affairs, Stretto can fulfill that basic requirement. Its interface is generally considered professional and capable of producing a technically correct petition. Some firms may also value its connection to a broader bankruptcy ecosystem, which can be relevant in cases involving complex asset administration or cross-case issues. In this narrow sense, Stretto works for the mechanical act of petition drafting and filing.
Where Stretto Falls Short for Ch7/Ch13
The operational reality of a consumer bankruptcy practice revolves around efficient client intake and document management. This is where Stretto's limitations become most apparent for debtor attorneys. The platform lacks a robust, integrated client portal for the secure exchange of documents like pay stubs, tax returns, and bank statements. Collecting this information typically falls to manual processes—emails, phone calls, and physical document gathering—which creates administrative bottlenecks and increases the risk of error or lost paperwork. Furthermore, Stretto does not offer built-in, AI-driven tools to automatically parse and populate data from uploaded bank statements or tax documents, a feature that has become a significant time-saver in competing products. This gap forces attorneys and staff to manually key in financial data, a tedious and error-prone process that directly impacts profitability and client service speed.
Stretto vs Best Case
When comparing Stretto to Best Case Cloud, a platform built specifically for debtor attorneys, the differences in design philosophy are stark. Best Case Cloud is developed from the ground up with the debtor-side workflow in mind, emphasizing client collaboration and data automation (Best Case, bestcase.com, 2026).
| Feature | Stretto | Best Case Cloud |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Design Focus | Trustee/Ch11 Administration | Debtor-Side Petition Preparation |
| Client Document Portal | Limited or requires third-party tools | Integrated, secure client portal |
| Bank Statement Analysis | Manual data entry required | Automated parsing and categorization |
| Client Intake Workflow | Basic form functionality | Structured intake questionnaires |
| Best For | Firms needing admin-side tools or handling complex assets | High-volume consumer Ch7/Ch13 practices |
This comparison highlights that while both can produce a filed petition, Best Case Cloud is engineered to streamline the entire pre-petition process that consumes the majority of a debtor firm's time. Stretto, in contrast, provides the end product (the petition) without deeply optimizing the labor-intensive steps required to get there.
Closing the Doc-Collection Gap
For a debtor firm committed to using Stretto, the critical path to efficiency is to address the document collection gap with a dedicated add-on. This is where Bankrupt Pro fits. Bankrupt Pro is an add-on alongside Stretto (or Best Case Cloud / Jubilee Pro / Next Chapter BK) — never a replacement for filing software; it does not touch the ECF/filing workflow. For $39 per case (or $59 per case with AI forensic transaction analysis), the debtor connects financial accounts through a secure bank-data connection (no manual PDF downloads, no emailing sensitive statements), 90+ days (up to 24 months) of bank transaction history is pulled with scheduled refresh, and the firm receives a court-ready PDF/ZIP financial packet organized by account and date range. The AI tier adds forensic flags for potential §547 preference payments (11 U.S.C. §547), §548 fraudulent-transfer candidates (11 U.S.C. §548), structuring, gambling, and undisclosed accounts — features Stretto does not provide on the debtor side. There is no subscription and no contract. This hybrid approach allows a firm to keep Stretto for its petition and noticing strengths while mitigating its most significant operational weakness for consumer practice.
Conclusion
Stretto is a powerful and respected platform within its core domain of Chapter 11 administration and trustee services. For debtor-side Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 attorneys, it offers a competent petition preparation tool. However, an honest assessment must conclude that it is not an all-in-one practice management solution for consumer bankruptcy.
zed for the high-volume, client-data-intensive workflow.
How does Stretto compare to Best Case Cloud? The primary difference is their target user. Best Case Cloud is built from the ground up for debtor attorneys.
What gaps does Stretto leave for debtor firms? The most significant gap is in pre-petition client intake and document management.
Is Stretto worth it for solo bankruptcy practices? It depends on the practice's workflow and volume.
Sources
- Stretto Official Website. Stretto. Accessed 2026-05-18. https://www.stretto.com/
- Best Case Cloud. Best Case. Accessed 2026-05-18. https://www.bestcase.com/
- CM/ECF - Case Management/Electronic Case Files. PACER. Accessed 2026-05-18. https://pacer.uscourts.gov/
- 11 U.S. Code § 547 - Preferences. Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School. Accessed 2026-05-18. https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/11/547
- 11 U.S. Code § 548 - Fraudulent transfers and obligations. Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School. Accessed 2026-05-18. https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/11/548
Bankrupt Pro is software built by AI Visionary Group LLC and is not a law firm. Bankrupt Pro does not provide legal advice. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.