Best Co-Parenting in Alaska — 11 verified resources

About Co-Parenting for Women

Co-parenting programs help separated and divorced mothers share custody constructively and document communication. Most states require court-ordered parent education (often called 'children first' or 'co-parenting' classes) before finalizing a divorce or custody order involving minor children — typically 4–6 hours, online or in person, costing 5–$75. Court-based mediation programs are often free or sliding-scale and certified through state mediation councils. Digital tools like OurFamilyWizard, Talking Parents, and 2Houses provide court-admissible message logs, shared calendars, and expense tracking that family judges increasingly require in high-conflict cases. This directory includes state-required classes, mediators, and co-parenting apps.

Co-Parenting in Alaska

Alaska family cases are heard in the Alaska Superior Court under its unified trial court structure. The Child Support Services Division within the Department of Revenue handles enforcement. Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Juneau host the largest court locations. Alaska Legal Services Corporation and the Alaska Network on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault provide statewide support for women.

11 Resources

1. Alaska Cooperative Extension — Parenting — Free

The University of Alaska Cooperative Extension Service provides parenting education programs and resources for separating and divorcing families, including co-parenting workshops, research-based family guides, and community-based classes. Call 907-474-5211 or visit uaf.edu/ces for program information. Services are available across Alaska including rural communities. Many programs are free or low-cost. Open Mon-Fri 8am-5pm.

907-474-5211 · Statewide Service · Mon-Fri 8am-5pm · Visit Website

2. All Alaska Pediatric Partnership — Family Support — Free

All Alaska Pediatric Partnership provides programs supporting healthy child development and parenting for Alaska families, including co-parenting resources for separated parents. Call 907-248-7370 for information on current programs and workshops in Anchorage. Staff can connect women with community family support resources and parenting education opportunities. Open Mon-Fri 8am-5pm.

907-248-7370 · Anchorage, AK · Mon-Fri 8am-5pm

3. Thread Alaska — Family Resource Center — Free

Thread Alaska is a statewide nonprofit providing parenting support, family resource centers, and early childhood services across Alaska. Resources include parenting classes, co-parenting workshops, childcare referrals, and family strengthening programs. Call 907-265-3100 for information on services in your community. Located in Anchorage with statewide reach including rural areas. Open Mon-Fri 8am-5pm.

907-265-3100 · Anchorage, AK · Mon-Fri 8am-5pm

4. Our Family Wizard — Free

Our Family Wizard is the leading co-parenting app providing shared calendars, secure messaging, expense tracking, and a tone meter to reduce conflict. All communications are timestamped and unalterable, making them court-admissible if disputes arise. Used and recommended by family courts and attorneys. Subscription fee applies; fee waivers available for qualifying low-income parents. Access at ourfamilywizard.com.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

5. TalkingParents — Free

TalkingParents is a co-parenting app offering secure, unalterable messaging, a shared calendar, expense tracking, and document storage. All records can be exported for court use. The app helps women document co-parenting communications accurately. A free basic plan is available; premium plans add advanced features. Download via iOS or Android or access at talkingparents.com.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

6. AppClose — Free

AppClose is a free co-parenting app providing a shared calendar, secure messaging, expense tracking, and parenting plan management tools. The app helps women and co-parents coordinate schedules, split costs, and keep records of communications. Available for iOS and Android at no cost. Premium features available through subscription. Access online at appclose.com or download from your app store.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

7. 2houses — Free

2houses is a co-parenting platform with shared calendars, expense tracking, family document storage, and medical records management. It helps divorced and separated mothers keep everything organized across two households. Features include a child information journal, photo sharing, and reimbursement tracking. A 14-day free trial is available. Access online or via mobile app at 2houses.com.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

8. Coparenter — Free

Coparenter is a co-parenting app combining communication tools with on-demand access to professional mediators and parenting coaches. Women can message their co-parent, manage schedules, and request live mediation help when disputes arise. Recommended by family courts in several states. Subscription-based with a free trial available. Access at coparenter.com or via iOS and Android apps.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

9. Up to Parents — Free

Up to Parents is a free, court-recommended online co-parenting course helping separated or divorcing parents focus on their children's well-being during and after family transitions. The self-paced course covers communication, reducing conflict, and building healthy routines for children. Many courts recommend or require this course. Access 24/7 at uptoparents.org. No cost; only requires creating a free account.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

10. Cozi Family Organizer — Free

Cozi Family Organizer is a free shared calendar, to-do list, shopping list, and reminder app ideal for co-parents coordinating children's schedules, activities, and appointments. All family members can view and update the shared calendar in real time from their smartphones. The free version covers most co-parenting needs. Available for iOS and Android. Access online at cozi.com.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

11. Custody X Change — Free

Custody X Change is software that helps women create detailed parenting plans, build visual custody schedules, and automatically calculate each parent's time percentage. Courts accept Custody X Change parenting plans as professional documents. The software includes templates, legal language examples, and a time tracker. A free trial is available. Full access requires a one-time purchase at custodyxchange.com.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

Frequently Asked

How many co-parenting resources are in Alaska?
Women's Corner tracks 11 verified co-parenting resources for women in Alaska.
Are co-parenting resources in Alaska free?
11 of the 11 listed co-parenting resources in Alaska are explicitly free or low-cost.
Which cities in Alaska have co-parenting resources?
Listings span cities including Anchorage.
What are some examples of co-parenting resources in Alaska?
Featured entries include Alaska Cooperative Extension — Parenting, All Alaska Pediatric Partnership — Family Support, Thread Alaska — Family Resource Center, Our Family Wizard, TalkingParents.
Do these listings include phone numbers?
3 of 11 Alaska co-parenting listings include verified phone numbers.
Is a parenting class required for divorce?
In most states, yes — a 4–6 hour court-approved co-parenting class (5–$75, often online) is required before any divorce or custody order involving minor children is finalized. Check your state court's approved provider list. The class is gender-neutral and focuses on protecting kids from conflict.
What's mediation and do I have to do it?
Mediation is a confidential negotiation with a neutral third party to agree on a parenting plan. Most states require at least one mediation session before contested custody hearings. It's faster, cheaper, and less traumatic than litigation. If there's domestic violence history, you can request to opt out or have separate-room mediation.
Which co-parenting app should I use?
OurFamilyWizard, Talking Parents, and 2Houses are accepted as evidence in court in most US jurisdictions. They provide tamper-proof message logs, shared calendars, expense tracking, and a tone-monitoring feature. If your ex is abusive or harassing, these apps create a documented record judges will read.
How do I co-parent with someone who was abusive?
Use parallel parenting instead of cooperative co-parenting — minimize contact, use a court-monitored app for all communication, exchange the child at a neutral location or police station, and stick strictly to the written parenting plan. Document everything. Many states allow supervised exchanges through Safe Exchange programs at no cost.