There may still not be any interior bearing walls but you should check carefully.
Attic trusses resting on non bearing wall.
If your roof is trusses no walls internally are load bearing only the external walls are.
The concern is that when the truss deflects the non bearing wall could be an effective support point.
An example of a non load bearing partition wall can be seen on the left.
The outside walls are supporting the roof so they re bearing walls.
If there are two plates refer to an engineer.
Actually a quick way to determine if the wall is bearing is to cut hole at the top to see if it has one or two top plates.
When joists trusses are perpendicular to the wall and bear on the top of the wall that wall is bearing wall.
3 only part of the roof framing may be trusses and the rest is rafters as in the photo below.
A beam directly under a wall usually means that it s a bearing wall whether the beam is in a crawl space basement or on the main floor.
Ceiling joists that meet over the wall indicate that it s a bearing wall.
It is carrying the weight of the ceiling.
This is sometimes done by a homeowner to provide cleared space in the attic for storage but destroys the structural integrity of the truss.
If there is a column that supports the truss found in the wall the wall still would not be load bearing because the column is taking the load.
Chances are this is a non bearing wall.
Non loadbearing walls as designated shall not carry any truss loading and shall not be packed to touch the underside of trusses see figure below.
One top plate and a space between the bottom chord of the truss and the top of the wall non load bearing.
An example of a load bearing wall call be seen on the right.
If the wall in question is parallel to the joists trusses it will likely not be load bearing.
Interior walls might be load bearing or may not be.
If the support point is at a truss panel point additional load could be put on the element supporting the non bearing wall thus causing distress.