Court Exhibit Templates
Format screenshots, messages, emails, and documents into consistent, labeled exhibits. Includes exhibit covers A–Z, evidence index, incident log, and message log layouts.
CustodyCourtReady helps parents organize communication, incidents, and evidence into clear, professional documents using templates and AI-powered tools. Designed for family court documentation — not legal advice.
While templates and binders help, the most effective approach is a clear, chronological timeline that organizes your records, highlights patterns, and makes everything easier to present in court.
Format screenshots, messages, emails, and documents into consistent, labeled exhibits. Includes exhibit covers A–Z, evidence index, incident log, and message log layouts.
A structured binder for your entire case: communication logs, incident reports, parenting time calendars, school and medical documentation, witness notes, and evidence index.
Turn scattered notes, messages, and incidents into a clear, court-ready timeline. Organize events by date, highlight patterns, and generate structured records that are easy to review, print, and present.
Use free tools to create custody schedules, review visitation patterns, and plan positive parenting time activities.
Start with a ready-to-use exhibit pack that standardizes how you label, index, and reference evidence in your case.
One-time purchase with instant access. You can update, print, or duplicate templates as needed for your case.
Turn scattered notes, messages, and incidents into a structured, chronological timeline. Organize your records, highlight patterns, and create documentation that is easy to review, print, and present in court.
Quickly capture events, messages, and interactions in one place. Add key details like dates, categories, sources, and notes to keep everything consistent.
View your entries in a clean, chronological timeline that makes patterns easier to identify. Filter, sort, and customize what you show based on what matters most.
Generate structured timelines you can print or include in your custody binder. Present your records in a clear, professional format that’s easy for others to review.
Start simple with a court exhibit pack, or invest in a complete custody case binder. Add AI tools when you’re ready for structured support with reports and timelines.
Best for parents who need to format exhibits clearly and consistently.
Ideal if your case is ongoing and you want a single place to keep everything organized over time.
The most effective way to stay organized. Build a clear, chronological timeline of your custody case that is easy to review, print, and present in court.
CustodyCourtReady focuses on clear, repeatable documentation practices that support you over months — not just one hearing.
Short, practical articles that help you document clearly, stay organized, and prepare evidence the court can review quickly.
Learn what courts actually respond to, why organization affects credibility, and how to translate experiences into court-ready documentation.
A clear breakdown of what typically helps, what doesn’t, and how to organize documents so they’re easy to reference.
A practical guide for creating neutral, consistent logs that hold up over time — without emotional language.
Want a specific topic covered? Email us or use the tools to build your case binder and we’ll publish guides that match real documentation needs.
CustodyCourtReady exists to give parents practical tools to organize, document, and present information during custody and parenting-time cases. The focus is on structure, clarity, and consistency.
We understand that custody cases can feel overwhelming. It can be hard to know what to track, how to organize it, and how to keep everything consistent over time. CustodyCourtReady is built around a simple idea: if your documentation is organized, it’s easier for you, your support system, and your legal professionals to understand what has happened.
CustodyCourtReady is not a law firm, does not provide legal advice, and does not replace an attorney. Always consult a qualified legal professional about your rights, options, and any questions you have about your case.