If you are co-parenting in St. Louis County, you can message the other parent for free. Parents in St. Louis county and across Missouri 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 across Missouri, from St. Louis to Kansas City to Springfield, works best when every message is calm, clear, and saved. This free app gives you secure direct text messaging with your co-parent and builds a time-stamped, tamper-evident written record. In high-conflict cases, judges often want co-parents to communicate in writing, and a steady written history keeps the focus where it belongs, on your kids.
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 Missouri 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 St. Louis County? Pair your free messaging with our St. Louis 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 St. Louis County, with $0 to start and no credit card. You also get free family law guides, a Child Support Calculator, and court forms for Missouri 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 Missouri 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 Missouri attorney.