Best Co-Parenting in Minnesota — 12 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 Minnesota

Minnesota district courts hear family matters across its 87 counties. The Child Support Enforcement Division operates under DHS. Minneapolis-Saint Paul anchors the state; Rochester, Duluth, and Bloomington follow. Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid, Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services, and Violence Free Minnesota (the statewide DV coalition) serve women.

12 Resources

5. Our Family Wizard — Free

Industry-leading co-parenting app for shared calendars, messaging, expense tracking, and court-admissible records.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

6. TalkingParents — Free

Co-parenting communication app with secure messaging, calendar, and unalterable records for court use.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

7. AppClose — Free

Free co-parenting app with shared calendar, messaging, expense tracking, and parenting plan tools.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

8. 2houses — Free

Co-parenting platform for shared calendars, expense tracking, and family medical records.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

9. Coparenter — Free

Co-parenting communication and mediation app with on-demand expert help.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

10. Up to Parents — Free

Free online co-parenting course recommended by family courts. Helps parents focus on children's needs.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

11. Cozi Family Organizer — Free

Free shared family calendar, lists, and reminder app — useful for co-parents coordinating schedules.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

12. Custody X Change — Free

Software for creating parenting plans, custody schedules, and tracking visitation time.

Nationwide · Online · Visit Website

Frequently Asked

How many co-parenting resources are in Minnesota?
Women's Corner tracks 12 verified co-parenting resources for women in Minnesota.
Are co-parenting resources in Minnesota free?
11 of the 12 listed co-parenting resources in Minnesota are explicitly free or low-cost.
Which cities in Minnesota have co-parenting resources?
Listings span cities including Minneapolis, St. Paul, West St. Paul.
What are some examples of co-parenting resources in Minnesota?
Featured entries include Conflict Resolution Center — Twin Cities, Minnesota Fathers and Families Network, Parents Forever — University of Minnesota Extension, Dakota County Family Services — Co-Parenting, Our Family Wizard.
Do these listings include phone numbers?
4 of 12 Minnesota 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.