Docket is a modular card grid landing page built for bankruptcy court services practices. It leads with a full-viewport infographic showing $11.2 billion in discharged debt, then walks visitors through Chapter 7 versus Chapter 13 comparisons, a flip-card process timeline, anonymized case outcome profiles, and a three-step qualification form, all wrapped in a civic federal visual identity designed to build confidence through data.
by Rocket studio
Docket is a single-page, stats-first lead generation template for bankruptcy court services. It opens with hard federal data, guides visitors through the filing process card by card, and closes with a progressive three-step qualification form. Every module is built to replace anxiety with arithmetic, giving people the confidence to take the next step toward debt relief.
This template serves law practices and legal service providers who help individuals navigate the federal bankruptcy process. It is built for teams that want to convert distressed visitors into qualified leads without relying on emotional imagery.
People searching for bankruptcy help are often overwhelmed and skeptical. Generic legal landing pages fail because they lead with emotion and delay proof. This template leads with proof first.
You get a fully structured, modular landing page ready to customize for any bankruptcy court services practice. Every section is pre-built and purposeful.
This template includes purpose-built components grounded in the brief's lead generation direction and civic design system.
The hero fills the entire viewport with federal discharge data. Count-up animations trigger on scroll, displaying figures such as total debt discharged, average time to discharge, and the Chapter 7 completion rate. No photography is used, just authoritative numbers rendered in federal slate and decisive blue.
Two modular cards break down Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 in plain language. Each card shows outcome percentages and key differences. Chapter 7 eliminates most unsecured debt by addressing non-exempt assets, while Chapter 13 lets individuals with regular income keep property while repaying debts over three to five years.
A horizontal step sequence walks visitors from consultation through filing, automatic stay, and discharge. Each card flips on hover to reveal what happens to creditor contact at that stage. The automatic stay prevents creditors from taking action against a debtor's property the moment the petition is filed.
A staggered card row presents real outcome profiles: debt amount entering, zero owed exiting, and days elapsed. These cards act as small proof points, showing that the court process delivers measurable results for people across every debt category.
The inline form uses progressive disclosure across three steps. Step one collects total debt estimate and debt type. Step two asks about employment status and whether wages are currently being garnished. Step three collects name, phone, and preferred contact time. A secondary path offers a downloadable Chapter 7 checklist for visitors not yet ready to call.
After the first scroll, a persistent bottom bar appears with the primary call to action. This keeps the conversion path visible at every point in the page without interrupting the data-driven reading flow.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Infographic hero viewport | Display federal discharge statistics and animate data counters |
| Chapter comparison cards | Compare Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 outcomes in plain language |
| Process timeline row | Show filing steps with flip-card creditor protection details |
| Case outcome profiles | Present anonymized debt-in to zero-out results |
| Qualification form | Collect lead information across three progressive steps |
| Footer linear row | Provide practice contact details and required disclosures |
The visual identity follows a Civic Service theme that feels like a clean federal building on the morning of a court hearing. The palette signals order and protection without intimidation.
The target audience checks pages during work breaks and late at night, often on a phone. The layout is built mobile-first to address that reality directly.
Every scroll reveals another layer of evidence that bankruptcy works, replacing doubt with data.
The Docket federal debt relief bankruptcy court landing page template is designed specifically for the United States legal market, using federal terminology and USD figures throughout.




Theme
Civic Service
Creative direction
Stats-First Impact
Color system
Arctic White
Style
Card Grid (Modular)
Direction
Lead Generation
Page Sections
Infographic Hero with Animated Stat Counters
Chapter Comparison Bento Cards
Flip-card Process Timeline
Anonymized Case Outcome Cards
Three-step Progressive Qualification Form
Sticky Conversion Bar
What chapters of bankruptcy does this template cover?
Does the template include the bankruptcy forms themselves?
Can I customize the statistical figures shown in the hero section?
What happens after a visitor completes the three-step form?
Is this template suitable for a practice that handles both individual and business filers?