Your case deserves better than a notes app
Document incidents, track exchanges, organize evidence - all in one secure place. Built for parents in custody cases who need their records organized, searchable, and ready to hand to an attorney.
Early access opening soon. Join the waitlist to be first in line.
Protect what matters most with organized, credible documentation
Everything you need in one place
Daily journal
Record observations as they happen with voice, text, photos, or video
Exchange tracking
GPS-verified pickups and dropoffs with condition notes
Incident reports
Structured documentation of safety concerns and violations
Communication logs
Track every interaction with timestamps and context
Medical & school
Organize appointments, prescriptions, grades, and IEPs
Attorney-ready reports
Generate professional timelines and documentation packets your lawyer can use
Why CustodyBinder is different
Built for you, not both parents
This isn't a co-parenting app. It's your private documentation tool. Share with your lawyer, family, or advocates - never the other parent.
Tamper-evident records
Every entry is hashed and timestamped. Edits create new versions. Originals are preserved. Built so your records hold up when examined.
Document anywhere, anytime
Mobile apps for iOS and Android. Works offline. Record what happened at the exchange or doctor's office, sync when you're ready.
Designed with your safety in mind
We don't run ads or sell your data. Ever.
App icon swap and quick-exit for DV survivors
Export everything and cancel anytime
Core features free for as long as you need
Be first when we launch
Early access is opening soon. Join the waitlist and we'll reach out the moment you're in.
Join the waitlistCustodyBinder is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. CustodyBinder is a documentation tool - nothing it produces is a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney. Reports, summaries, and exports are organizational aids for you and your legal team. They are not intended for direct submission to any court without attorney review. If you are involved in a custody or child welfare proceeding, consult a qualified family law attorney in your state.