| How they differ | Casewell (private journal) | Shared co-parenting apps |
|---|---|---|
| Who participates | You alone | Both parents on one platform |
| Core job | Your dated record of events, expenses, and evidence | Communication, scheduling, and payments between parents |
| Depends on co-parent cooperation | No | Yes — value drops if one parent disengages |
| Messaging | None by design — it is not a communication channel | Central feature, often with tone tools and call recording |
| Who can see your entries | Only you, until you export | Messages and shared items visible to the other parent |
| Exports | Filtered PDF bundles: timeline, expenses, attorney bundle | Records of platform activity available for legal review |
| Typical cost | $2.99/wk or $49.99/yr, one subscription total | Free tiers to per-parent subscriptions, each parent pays |
Shared-app details reflect OurFamilyWizard, TalkingParents, and AppClose as described on their public websites, checked July 9, 2026.
Two different jobs
A shared co-parenting app is infrastructure between two people: it exists so that messages, schedule changes, and expense requests happen in one accountable place both parents can see. A private custody journal is your own contemporaneous record: what actually happened at today's handover, the receipt for the school shoes, the screenshot of the message that matters, written down while the details are fresh. Casewell is deliberately the second thing. It has no message feed, no shared calendar, and no co-parent account — which is precisely what makes it work when cooperation is not available.
What shared apps do well
When both parents engage, shared platforms are genuinely useful. OurFamilyWizard adds ToneMeter to flag heated wording before a message sends, trades parenting time on a shared calendar, and routes expenses with payment splits. TalkingParents makes the communication record unalterable — nothing can be edited or deleted — and offers accountable calling with recordings. AppClose covers messaging, calendars, and reimbursement requests with a free core offering. Family courts in the US regularly order parents onto these platforms specifically because the shared record reduces disputes about who said what.
Where shared apps stop working
Every shared platform has the same dependency: the other parent. If they refuse to join, respond off-platform, go quiet for weeks, or use the message feed to provoke, the shared record captures only a slice of your reality. None of the between-parent tools document the things that happen outside the app — the no-show at the pickup point, the condition your child came home in, the expense you covered alone, the pattern across three months of Fridays. That documentation gap is the specific problem a private journal exists to close.
Where Casewell fits
Casewell gives you a structured private record with a category for every situation separated parents actually document: handovers and missed handovers, parenting time, communication issues, expenses with reimbursement status, school, medical, safeguarding concerns, and general child wellbeing. Each entry is timestamped, can carry attachments — screenshots, photos, receipts, PDFs, voice notes — and lives in an encrypted vault behind your passcode and Face ID. The optional neutral-rewrite tool suggests calmer phrasing for heated drafts, and you approve every word. When it matters, you export a filtered PDF: a timeline for your attorney, an expense summary, or a mediation pack.
Using Casewell alongside a shared app
This is not an either-or choice, and in higher-conflict situations it usually should not be. If a court has ordered OurFamilyWizard or TalkingParents, keep using it exactly as directed — and keep Casewell as the private layer the shared feed cannot see: your own notes on each exchange, evidence the platform does not hold, and the running expense record. The two records answer different questions. The shared app shows what was communicated; your journal shows what you experienced and can support with attachments.
Cost and commitment
Casewell is one subscription — $2.99/week or $49.99/year after a 14-day free trial — because there is only one user. Shared platforms are typically priced per parent, so the real cost of a paid shared app is usually double the sticker price, and it recurs for as long as the court order or arrangement lasts. AppClose's free core changes that math for basic needs, which is why it appears in our best custody journal apps comparison as the budget shared option.
How to decide
Ask two questions. First: has a court or agreement named a platform? If yes, use it — that decision is made. Second: does your documentation need survive the other parent's non-participation? If what you need is a record that exists regardless of their cooperation, that is a private journal, and it is the job Casewell is built for. If what you need is accountable communication both parents will actually use, pick a shared platform and hold the private journal in reserve for everything the feed cannot capture.
Sources checked
Comparison facts are based on public sources and are dated so they can be reviewed later.
- Apple App Store: Casewell checked 2026-07-09.
- OurFamilyWizard website checked 2026-07-09.
- TalkingParents website checked 2026-07-09.
- AppClose website checked 2026-07-09.
Does my co-parent need Casewell?
No. Casewell is for your own private records. There is no shared account, no invitation, and the other parent never sees your entries.
Is Casewell a replacement for OurFamilyWizard or TalkingParents?
Not when a court has ordered shared communication — keep using the ordered platform. Casewell replaces the scattered notes, screenshots, and spreadsheets you keep on your own side, and works alongside any shared app.
Why doesn't Casewell have messaging?
By design. A private journal that also messaged your co-parent would stop being private. Communication belongs on whatever channel you already use or a court directs; Casewell holds your record of it.
Can I use Casewell alongside another co-parenting app?
Yes. Many parents keep a shared app for communication and scheduling while using Casewell as the private documentation layer for events, expenses, and evidence.
Is Casewell cheaper than shared co-parenting apps?
Often, because it is one subscription rather than one per parent: $2.99/week or $49.99/year with a 14-day free trial. Compare current prices on each provider's site, since plans change.