The Best Co-Parenting Apps of 2026

I built Civly after going through my own divorce and trying every co-parenting app on the market. This is the honest comparison I wish I'd had — what each app actually does, what it costs, and where it falls short. Yes, I'm biased — but I'll tell you exactly where.

Civly

$59/yr

Everything included

OurFamilyWizard

$110–300/yr

Per parent, tier-dependent

TalkingParents

$77–$353/yr

Free plan eliminated March 2026

Civil Communicator

~$600–720/yr

Credit-based, human review

AppClose

Paid (since Jan 2026)

Was free, now requires subscription

Feature comparison

Green = fully supported. Yellow = partial or limited. Red = not available.

Feature
Civly
OFW
TP
CC
AppClose
AI Message Rewrite
Private Vent Mode
Voice-to-Text
Conflict Scoring
Court-Admissible Records
Attorney Portal
Expense Tracking
Receipt OCR
Calendar Sync
Court Order Parsing
Pattern Detection
Mobile App

Detailed reviews

Civly — $59/year

Civly is the newest entry in the co-parenting app space, launched in 2026 by a founder who went through his own high-conflict divorce. The platform was built AI-first, meaning every feature was designed around the BIFF method (Brief, Informative, Firm, Friendly) developed by Bill Eddy at the High Conflict Institute. When you write a message, Civly's AI can rewrite it entirely into court-safe language — not just flag tone issues, but produce a completely new message you can send with one tap.

The standout feature is Private Vent Mode. You can write exactly what you're feeling — the anger, the frustration, all of it — and it stays completely private. It never gets sent, never gets stored in court records, and no one else ever sees it. Then Civly's AI takes what you vented and rewrites it into something a judge would approve of. It's therapy and communication tool in one.

Beyond messaging, Civly includes a color-coded custody calendar with sync to TeamSnap and BAND, expense tracking with receipt OCR (snap a photo of a receipt and it's auto-extracted), court order AI parsing (upload your divorce decree and AI reads it), voice-to-text message composition, certified PDF exports with SHA-256 hashing, a free attorney portal, and a Plaid bank integration for expense verification. All for $59/year — no tiers, no upsells.

Where it falls short: Civly is new. It launched in 2026 and doesn't have the decade-plus track record of OurFamilyWizard. There's no native mobile app yet — it's a progressive web app (PWA) that you add to your home screen. And because it's not yet named in many court orders, you may need your attorney to file a motion to add it if your order specifies a different platform.

Best for: Parents who want the most features at the lowest price, especially those in high-conflict situations who need AI rewriting.

OurFamilyWizard — $110–300/year

OurFamilyWizard (OFW) is the most established co-parenting app, founded in 2001. It's the platform most frequently named in court orders, especially in Minnesota where it was created. OFW has strong brand recognition among family law attorneys and judges, and its track record in court is unmatched. If your attorney or judge is already familiar with a co-parenting app, it's probably this one.

OFW offers a solid feature set: messaging, a shared custody calendar, expense tracking, and a journal/info bank for storing important documents. Their professional portal integrates with Clio (law practice management software), which makes it popular with attorneys. The Max tier ($300/year) adds calling with recording and GPS check-ins for custody exchanges. Their AI feature, ToneMeter, flags potential tone issues in your messages before you send them.

Where it falls short: ToneMeter flags tone problems but doesn't rewrite your messages — you still have to figure out how to fix them yourself. The pricing is steep: the Basic plan at $110/year lacks many features, and the Premium plan at $180/year still doesn't include calling or GPS. The Max plan at $300/year is comprehensive but expensive. There's no receipt OCR, no voice-to-text, no court order parsing, and no private vent mode. The interface feels dated compared to newer apps.

Best for: Parents whose court order already names OFW, or whose attorney strongly prefers it for its established court track record.

TalkingParents — $77 to $353/year

Update (March 30, 2026): TalkingParents has eliminated their free plan. All users now require a paid subscription. Their tiers are: Essentials at $7/month (~$77/year), Enhanced at $16/month (~$177/year), and Ultimate at $32/month (~$353/year). A 30-day free trial is available, and fee waivers exist for domestic violence and financial hardship cases.

TalkingParents previously carved out a strong position with its free tier, making it the default choice for budget-conscious parents. With that gone, it competes on its established brand and court familiarity. The platform offers "Unalterable Records" — timestamped messages that can't be edited or deleted.

In March 2026, TalkingParents also launched Sentiment Scanner and Writing Assist — their first AI features. Sentiment Scanner analyzes your messages for positive, neutral, or negative tone. Writing Assist uses Grey Rock and Yellow Rock methods to suggest message edits. These are meaningful additions, but they're locked behind the Ultimate plan at $32/month (~$353/year per parent). The Enhanced plan at $16/month adds call recording and priority support but no AI.

Where it falls short: TalkingParents is messaging-only. There's no custody calendar, no expense tracking, no custody schedule management. If you need those features, you'll need separate apps. The AI features are expensive (~$353/year) and only suggest edits rather than rewriting messages entirely. "Accountable Messaging" on paid tiers monitors your communication, which some parents find invasive. With the free tier gone, the value proposition is harder to justify compared to apps like Civly that include more features at a lower price.

Best for: Parents whose court order already names TalkingParents, or those who need the 30-day free trial to evaluate before committing.

Civil Communicator — ~$600–720/year

Civil Communicator takes a fundamentally different approach: instead of AI, every message is reviewed by a human communication coach before it's delivered. You write a message, a trained professional reviews it, suggests edits or rewrites it, and then it gets sent to your co-parent. The idea is that a human reviewer catches nuance and context that AI might miss.

The platform also offers communication coaching sessions and conflict scoring that tracks patterns over time. For parents in extremely high-conflict situations — especially those involving narcissistic abuse or domestic violence — having a human in the loop can feel safer than relying on AI. The coaches are trained in family dynamics and de-escalation techniques.

Where it falls short: Cost is the elephant in the room. Civil Communicator uses a credit-based system that works out to roughly $50–60 per month per parent ($600–720/year). That's more than 10x what Civly costs. Messages aren't instant — they go through human review, which can take hours. There's no calendar, no expense tracking, no mobile app, and no attorney portal. For most parents, the human review model is overkill for day-to-day logistics like "Can you pick up the kids at 3 instead of 4?"

Best for: Parents in extreme high-conflict situations who want human review of every message and can afford the premium price.

AppClose — Paid (since January 2026)

Update (January 2026): AppClose transitioned from a free app to a paid model in January 2026. The app that was previously positioned as the free, no-frills co-parenting option now requires a subscription.

AppClose offers basic messaging, a shared calendar, and simple expense splitting. The interface is clean and straightforward, and it was previously frequently court-ordered because it was free. The app has native iOS and Android apps with a functional, if basic, user experience. Calendar sharing and expense tracking are included, though they lack the depth of OurFamilyWizard or Civly.

Where it falls short: No AI features whatsoever — no message rewriting, no tone detection, no conflict scoring. Messages are not court-certified in the same way as OurFamilyWizard or Civly (no SHA-256 hashing or certified PDF exports). No receipt OCR, no court order parsing, no attorney portal, no bank integration. Now that it's no longer free, the value proposition is significantly weaker — for the same or more money, Civly includes AI messaging, receipt OCR, court order parsing, and much more.

Best for: Parents whose court order already names AppClose, or those who prefer a simple, no-frills interface for basic scheduling and messaging.

The verdict

Yes, I'm the founder of Civly, so take this with the appropriate grain of salt. But here's what I genuinely believe after using every one of these apps during my own divorce:

If you want the best value, Civly is the clear choice. At $59/year you get AI message rewriting, a full custody calendar, expense tracking with receipt OCR, court order parsing, voice-to-text, certified PDF exports, and a free attorney portal. No other app offers all of that at any price, let alone $59.

If your court order already names OurFamilyWizard, it may be simpler to stick with it rather than filing a motion to change. OFW has a proven court record and attorney familiarity that's hard to beat. But if you're choosing for the first time, Civly gives you more features for less money.

If budget is everything, BestInterest offers a free tier with basic messaging and limited AI coaching. TalkingParents eliminated their free plan in March 2026 — their cheapest option is now $7/month ($77/year). For $59/year, Civly gives you more features than either.

The honest trade-offs with Civly: We're new. We launched in 2026 and don't have OurFamilyWizard's 25-year track record. We don't have a native mobile app yet (our PWA works well, but it's not the same). And we're not yet named in court orders the way OFW is. We're earning that trust one family at a time.

What we do have is the best AI, the most features, and the lowest price. For most parents going through a divorce in 2026, that's what matters.

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Frequently asked questions

Last updated March 31, 2026. Pricing and features verified at time of publication.

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