See how Chronodocs helps parents in high-conflict family law cases document evidence, organize their case by issue, and share a court-ready file with their lawyer.

In this video, a board-certified Texas family law attorney walks through how parents in high-conflict custody, divorce, and other family law matters use Chronodocs to document every incident, organize evidence by issue, share the case with a lawyer in one click, and export a court-ready file that doesn't require anyone — judge, mediator, or attorney — to learn a new tool.
Instant access — no signup required
Start documenting in seconds. Cloud backup activates the moment you create an account, but you can begin building your timeline immediately.
One event at a time
Document each event as it happens — denied visits, hostile messages, missed pickups, anything that matters. Add the date, what happened, and your account of the moment.
Attach evidence directly to the event it proves
Text messages, emails, screenshots, photos, voice recordings, PDFs — every piece of evidence sits with the timeline entry it documents.
Highlight what matters in each document
Mark the specific lines a judge, mediator, or your lawyer needs to see. Highlights stay linked to the event, so jumping from a timeline entry to the proof takes one click.
Organize events by issue
Tag events by category — custody and time, co-parent conduct, parental alienation, child wellbeing, school and medical, money and support — so you can filter your timeline to focus on a single issue when you need to.
Share with your lawyer in one click
Hand your lawyer an organized case file instead of a folder of screenshots. They walk in already up to speed — no briefing meetings, no re-explaining, no billable hours spent organizing what you've already organized.
Court-ready exports for anyone
Export a linked Excel file and a zip of every document, complete with your highlights and exhibit markings. The Excel rows link directly to the documents — same as it works inside the app — so the file is usable by judges, mediators, and attorneys who don't want to learn a new tool.
Open Chronodocs and start by documenting the most recent incident on your mind. Don't worry about getting it perfect — you can edit and add evidence anytime. The act of writing it down is itself the first move toward turning what feels chaotic into something a judge can read.

Open app.chronodocs.com and start documenting. Add cloud backup and share with your lawyer when you sign up — free.