Step 01
Enter the filer details once
This creates the initial submission and gives the office one record to keep building instead of several partial files.
Portal process
This page explains how one submission becomes the working file, what happens after the first upload, and how to keep documents attached to the same record instead of scattering them across different channels.
The first upload is not supposed to be perfect. It is supposed to create one stable submission record with the filer name, contact information, basic comments, and the first set of documents the office can actually review.
Step 01
This creates the initial submission and gives the office one record to keep building instead of several partial files.
Step 02
Use the closest matching document sections for IDs, pay records, taxes, bank statements, loan records, and additional materials.
Step 03
If a record is missing, delayed, or still being requested from someone else, say that in the status note instead of waiting in silence.
Step 04
The submission ID is the anchor for later uploads and status checks. It should stay with the file from that point forward.
The office uses the upload record to see what categories are present, what still looks missing, and whether the file involves timing pressure that changes what should be reviewed first.
When more documents appear later, the goal is not to start over. The goal is to reopen the same submission, add the next set of records, and keep the intake history tied to one identifier.
Enter the existing Submission ID when you come back so the upload is appended instead of stored as a separate new intake.
You do not need to re-upload everything if only one category is new. Add the new material and update the notes if needed.
The status page helps you see what categories are already on file and what still appears to be missing.
If a deadline has changed since the first upload, note it and contact the office directly when timing is tight.
Foreclosure notices, garnishment papers, repossession threats, and hearing dates can change the order of operations. In those files, the office usually needs the deadline details early while the rest of the document set is still being gathered.
Use this guide if wages are already being taken or a garnishment order is in place.
Use this guide if a home-related deadline is driving the timing of the intake.
Use this guide if a vehicle is already at risk or has already been taken.
Use direct contact when the deadline is too close to rely on the portal alone.
Use the upload portal if you are ready to begin the file, or use the FAQ and resources pages if the issue is still what to gather first.