Typical Attorney Fee Ranges in Massachusetts
Bankruptcy attorney fees in Massachusetts generally fall within the following market ranges. These reflect typical practice in no-asset and straightforward cases. Complex cases, litigation, or Chapter 11 matters routinely exceed these ranges.
| Chapter | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Chapter 7 (consumer) | $1,800-$3,200 | Usually flat fee; includes basic counseling and 341 meeting |
| Chapter 13 (consumer) | $4,000-$6,000 | Split flat / interim fee application; local "no-look" presumptive fee common |
| Chapter 11 (business) | hourly, $250-$600/hr typical | Hourly billing, court-approved fee applications required |
| Subchapter V (small business) | hourly, $250-$550/hr typical | Streamlined Ch. 11; Sub V trustee paid separately under Section 1195 |
Ranges reflect typical market practice; specific district-level no-look fees or presumptive guidelines may apply. Always check local rules for the bankruptcy court serving your case.
U.S. Trustee Oversight - Region 1
The Office of the United States Trustee (Region 1) supervises bankruptcy cases filed in Massachusetts. The U.S. Trustee has authority under 11 U.S.C. Section 307 to raise any issue in any case, including the reasonableness of attorney compensation. Under Section 329(b), the court may review fees on the U.S. Trustee's motion or on its own initiative.
11 U.S.C. Section 329(b): "If such compensation exceeds the reasonable value of any such services, the court may cancel any such agreement, or order the return of any such payment, to the extent excessive..."
When the U.S. Trustee identifies fees that appear disproportionate to services rendered, the office may file a motion under Section 329(b) and Rule 2017. The presumptive remedy for disclosure violations under Rule 2016(b) is full disgorgement. See our Section 329(b) caselaw map for the leading authorities.
Billing Review in Massachusetts Cases
If your attorney has charged fees you believe are excessive, the first step is a line-by-line billing review. Look for:
- Block billing: entries that combine multiple tasks under one time entry (e.g., "review file, draft motion, confer with client - 3.5 hours"). Block billing obscures per-task reasonableness.
- Vague descriptions: entries like "review case" or "attention to file" without specifying the task.
- Administrative work billed at attorney rates: filing, serving, mailing, formatting, or scheduling at $250+/hour.
- Duplicative entries: multiple attorneys or paralegals billing for the same task.
- Rate increases without disclosure: billing above the rate stated in the Rule 2016(b) statement.
- Billing for undone work: entries for tasks where no work product appears in the case record.
For a step-by-step methodology, see How to Review Your Bankruptcy Attorney's Billing.
Circuit Authority: 1st Circuit
Massachusetts bankruptcy cases are governed by 1st Circuit precedent. The leading 1st Circuit cases on attorney fee review are catalogued in our Section 329(b) caselaw map, organized by doctrinal prong (disclosure, reasonableness, remedy, procedural authority).
The universally-applied framework combines:
- The lodestar method - hours reasonably expended multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate (adopted from Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424 (1983))
- The Johnson 12-factor test - Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc., 488 F.2d 714 (5th Cir. 1974)
- The Section 330(a)(3) factors - imported into Section 329(b) analysis as the measure of "reasonable value"
Filing a Section 329(b) Fee Review in Bankr. D. Mass.
Fee review motions are filed in the bankruptcy court where the case is pending: Bankr. D. Mass.. Any party in interest has standing:
- The debtor
- The trustee (Chapter 7/13) or Sub V trustee (Subchapter V)
- The U.S. Trustee (Region 1)
- Any creditor
- The court on its own motion under Rule 2017
A motion typically addresses four elements: (1) the attorney's disclosures under Section 329(a) and Rule 2016(b); (2) services rendered versus services charged; (3) reasonableness measured against the lodestar and Section 330(a)(3) factors; (4) the appropriate remedy (full or partial disgorgement).
If you are reviewing attorney fees in a pending case, begin with a complete billing statement, the fee application (if any), and the Rule 2016(b) disclosure statement. These are the three primary documents for any Section 329(b) analysis.