Oklahoma parents in Tulsa, Oklahoma City, and small towns across the state need a calm, written way to talk about the kids without the drama. This free app keeps your co-parent text messages secure and tamper-evident, so you build a clear, time-stamped, court-defensible record. Judges in high-conflict cases often want co-parents to communicate in writing, and now you can do that without paying a monthly fee.
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 Oklahoma 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. When you and the other parent work out parenting time (what Oklahoma courts often call "Custody / Parenting Time"), a written record of what each of you agreed to keeps things clear.
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.
Getting started takes a minute. Create a free account, open the messenger, and invite your co-parent with a link. Both of you can send and read messages for free, with nothing to install to try it and no card on file. You only pay if you ever choose an optional upgrade.
Yes. Secure, tamper-evident text messaging with your co-parent is free here, with $0 to start and no credit card. Several well-known co-parenting apps that judges recommend dropped their free plans in 2026, but this one keeps co-parent texting free for Oklahoma families.
No. Both Oklahoma parents can send and receive secure text messages for free. There is no monthly fee just to talk to each other, unlike the paid co-parenting apps that now charge.
Nothing for co-parent text messaging. It is $0 with no credit card and no trial that turns into a charge. Optional upgrades exist if you ever want them, but messaging your co-parent in writing is always free.
No app is "court approved" the way an official form is, and we never claim a judge requires this one. What it gives you is a secure, time-stamped, tamper-evident record of your messages, which is the kind of clear written history family courts in Oklahoma expect when communication is at issue.
Send them a free invite link. Because there is no fee on either side, cost is never a reason to say no, and you both share the same calm, written thread that keeps the focus on your kids.