WARNING: MORTGAGE CLAIM RULES CHANGE DECEMBER 1, 2025. Is your Chapter 13 practice ready for the new Rule 3002.1? The Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure; 2026 Edition is the mandatory desktop reference for bankruptcy attorneys, trustees, and judges. This edition has been updated to include the critical amendments effective December 1, 2025 , rendering older editions unsafe for active litigation. Practitioners relying on 2024 or early 2025 rulebooks risk procedural default, particularly regarding home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) and mortgage cure determinations. CRITICAL UPDATES IN THE 2026 EDITION: Major Overhaul of Rule 3002.1 (Mortgages in Ch. 13): Completely new procedures for handling "End-of-Case" claims. New requirements for noticing payment changes on HELOCs and determining the status of mortgage claims mid-case. - Direct Appeals Clarified (Rule 8006): Resolves previous ambiguity, now explicitly confirming that any party to an appeal may request a direct certification to the Court of Appeals. - New Official Forms Included: Contains the text and usage notes for the new 410C13 series (Forms 410C13-M1 through M2R) required for determining mortgage status and final cures. - Adversary & Appellate Alignments: Updates to Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure (Rule 6) regarding bankruptcy appeals. COMPREHENSIVE CONTENTS: This volume provides a single, portable source for all federal bankruptcy governance: Complete Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure (Rules 1001–9038, fully updated). - U.S. Code Title 28 (Selected provisions regarding Jurisdiction and Venue). - The "Restyled" Text: Incorporates the readability improvements for Parts I–IX established in the previous cycle. WHO NEEDS THIS BOOK? Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys: Essential for navigating the new HELOC and mortgage cure notice requirements. - Chapter 13 Trustees: Critical for the new "Notice of Final Cure" procedures. - Creditor Rights Firms: Mandatory for complying with the new 410C13 Motion and Response deadlines. Stay compliant. Avoid sanctioned filings. Update your library to the 2026 standard today.