If you are co-parenting in Pima County, you can message the other parent for free. Parents in Pima county and across Arizona get the same secure, time-stamped thread at no cost, while the well-known paid co-parenting apps now charge a monthly fee.
Co-parenting in Arizona is hard enough without a subscription bill. This free app keeps your messages with your co-parent calm, clear, and saved in one place, so the focus stays on your kids and not on a fight. Every message builds a time-stamped, tamper-evident written record that holds up if you ever need it. In high-conflict cases, judges often want co-parents talking in writing, and now you can do that for free.
Every message you send lives in one secure thread that is time-stamped and tamper-evident, so you build a calm, clear written record. That is the kind of organized, court-defensible history that helps in Arizona family court, especially in high-conflict cases where judges often want co-parents to communicate in writing. FamilyCourtHelp.com is a self-help resource, not a law firm, and this is not legal advice.
Already filing or in a case tied to Pima County? Pair your free messaging with our Pima County family court guide for the clerk, e-filing, fees, and filing steps, plus free 50-state family law guides, a Child Support Calculator, and court forms.
Your free account also unlocks 50-state family law guides, FAQs and a glossary, a Family Court Map and flowchart, a Child Support Calculator, court forms and official links for all 50 states, and a lawyer and court reporter directory. No credit card, ever.
Yes. Co-parent text messaging is free for parents in Pima County, with $0 to start and no credit card. You also get free family law guides, a Child Support Calculator, and court forms for Arizona and every other state.
No. Both parents send and read messages for free. While the paid co-parenting apps now charge a monthly fee, secure text messaging here stays free for both of you.
Your messages are saved as a time-stamped, tamper-evident record, which is the kind of clear written history Arizona courts expect when communication is at issue. This is a self-help resource and not legal advice. For your specific case, talk with a licensed Arizona attorney.