Key points
- Text messages are admissible in Australian family court proceedings and are treated as documentary evidence.
- Courts look for authentication, completeness, and an unbroken chain of custody — not just the content.
- Screenshots alone are often insufficient; they can be edited and lack metadata.
- The best records are complete conversation threads with timestamps, preserved from the original source.
- A communication relay that archives every message automatically creates a court-ready record without any extra effort.
When people are in the middle of a difficult family law situation, one of the first questions they ask a lawyer is: "Can I use these messages as evidence?" The short answer is yes — text messages are regularly used in family court proceedings, and in some cases they are among the most powerful pieces of evidence available.
But the longer answer matters too. Courts don't just look at what a message says. They look at how it was obtained, how it's been preserved, and whether the record is complete. A poorly preserved message record can be challenged, minimised, or excluded. A well-preserved one can be decisive.
Are text messages admissible in family court?
Yes. In Australia, the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (FedCFamC) regularly admits text messages, emails, social media messages, and other digital communications as evidence. They are treated as documents under the Evidence Act 1995 and can be tendered in proceedings concerning parenting arrangements, property disputes, and protective orders.
The fact that a message is "just a text" does not make it less significant. Courts have made findings about parenting capacity, credibility, and safety based substantially on digital communication records. A pattern of abusive messages, attempts to undermine the other parent's relationship with the children, or violations of parenting orders can all be demonstrated through text records.
What courts actually look for
When digital messages are tendered as evidence, the court and the opposing legal team will scrutinise several things:
Authentication
Can the message be confirmed as genuinely sent by the person it's attributed to? This typically involves confirming the sending phone number or account, any associated name in the device contacts, and consistency with other evidence about how the parties communicated.
Completeness
Courts are rightly suspicious of cherry-picked messages. A single alarming text presented without context can look very different once the full thread is shown. The opposing lawyer will ask: what came before this message? What came after? Is this representative, or an outlier? A complete and unedited record is far stronger than selected extracts.
Chain of custody
How was this record preserved? Has it been altered since it was received? Records that come directly from the source — the original device, an automated backup system, or an independent archive — carry more weight than records that have passed through multiple hands or formats.
Consistency
Do the messages in the record line up with other evidence — call records, witness accounts, behaviour described in affidavits? Inconsistency weakens a record's credibility.
Why screenshots alone are often insufficient
Taking a screenshot of a text message is the most instinctive thing to do when you receive something alarming. And screenshots have been admitted in evidence. But they have significant weaknesses that your lawyer will want to understand:
- They can be edited. Image editing tools make it straightforward to alter the text in a screenshot. Courts and opposing counsel are aware of this. A screenshot that cannot be corroborated by metadata or the original message thread is vulnerable to challenge.
- They lack metadata. The timestamp displayed in a screenshot comes from the phone's display — it doesn't carry the underlying data that confirms when a message was sent or received at the network level.
- They're often incomplete. A screenshot captures what's visible on screen. It may not show the message that prompted a reply, messages that follow, or the broader pattern of communication.
- They can be reordered or staged. Someone could take a screenshot of a message on a different device, or construct a false message thread. This is difficult to prove definitively either way without the underlying data.
This doesn't mean screenshots are worthless — in combination with other evidence, they can be very useful. But relying on screenshots alone, particularly when the opposing party contests their authenticity, creates unnecessary risk.
How to properly preserve a digital record
The goal is to create a record that is as close to the original as possible, with an unbroken chain from the source.
Keep the original device
Do not trade in, factory-reset, or damage the device that received the messages. Even if the messages are backed up elsewhere, the original device may be required for forensic examination if authenticity is disputed.
Back up systematically
Use iCloud, Google, or your carrier's message backup service to maintain an ongoing backup of your messages. These backups include metadata and are harder to tamper with than screenshots. Export a copy to a secure location that is not shared with the other party.
Do not delete anything
This applies even to messages that are embarrassing to you, or that show you in a bad light. Selectively deleting messages is something courts take seriously, and the gaps can be discovered. Keep everything, and let your lawyer advise on what to tender and what context to provide.
Note context at the time
For significant messages, make a contemporaneous note — the date, what you understood the message to mean, and any surrounding circumstances. This creates a record of your state of mind at the time, which can be relevant in proceedings.
What not to do with your message record
There are several things that can seriously undermine the value of a message record, or cause problems for you personally:
- Do not edit or alter messages before providing them to your lawyer. Even well-intentioned changes (cropping irrelevant content, correcting a typo in your transcription) can destroy the record's credibility.
- Do not share messages on social media. Publishing private communications can create legal liability and may be used against you in proceedings.
- Do not send messages to third parties without your lawyer's advice. Forwarding a concerning message to your mother or a friend might seem harmless, but it complicates the chain of custody.
- Do not delete messages from the other party, even if they are distressing. The record needs to be complete. Deletions can be inferred from gaps in numbering or timestamps, and the other party's records may contradict yours.
- Do not try to obtain messages from the other person's phone or accounts without permission. Accessing another person's device or accounts without consent may constitute an offence under the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979. Speak to your lawyer before attempting to obtain records you don't already have.
How an archived relay system creates court-ready records
One of the practical challenges of message preservation is that it requires ongoing effort and discipline at a time when most people are dealing with significant stress. A communication relay that automatically archives everything removes that burden.
Rather than remembering to screenshot concerning messages, keeping devices safe, and manually organising records, you have a system that does it automatically. Every message sent to your relay address or number is logged with full metadata. The archive is comprehensive, continuous, and not dependent on you remembering to preserve anything in the moment.
This is particularly valuable in co-parenting situations where communication is ongoing over months or years. A long-term archive that captures the full pattern of communication — not just individual alarming messages — tells a far more complete story.
Resources and support
| 🇦🇺 Australia | 🇺🇸 United States | 🇬🇧 United Kingdom |
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Federal Circuit and Family CourtOfficial information on evidence, family court proceedings and parenting orders
AustLIIFree access to Australian legislation, case law and family court judgments
National Legal AidFind free or subsidised legal help for family, civil and criminal matters anywhere in Australia
Family Relationships OnlineGovernment service for dispute resolution and family court referrals
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US CourtsFederal court information including evidence rules and digital communications
ABA Family Law SectionLawyer referrals and guidance on evidence in family court proceedings
Legal Services CorporationFree legal help finder for family law and court matters
Nolo — Family LawPlain-language legal guides on evidence and family court procedures
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CafcassChildren and Family Court Advisory and Support Service
UK Government — Family CourtsOfficial guidance on family court proceedings and evidence in England and Wales
Law Society — Find a SolicitorSearch for a family law solicitor to advise on digital evidence
Citizens AdviceGuidance on taking a family matter to court
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Frequently asked questions
Can text messages be used in family court in Australia?
Yes. Text messages are admissible as evidence in Australian family court proceedings. They are treated as documentary evidence and can be used to support or undermine claims about communication patterns, behaviour, and parenting conduct.
Are screenshots of text messages admissible in court?
Screenshots can be admitted, but they carry lower evidentiary weight than a complete, authenticated digital record. Courts are aware that screenshots can be manipulated, cropped, or taken out of context. Your lawyer may be able to use screenshots, but a more complete record is always stronger.
How do I preserve text messages for court?
The best approaches are to use a backup service that preserves the original data, export messages through your device's backup system, or use a communication relay that creates a timestamped archive automatically. Avoid relying only on screenshots. Keep the device and do not delete any messages.
Do I need to tell the other person their messages may be used in court?
No. Messages sent to you are received by you, and you are entitled to retain copies. There is no requirement to warn a sender that you are keeping a record of their communications.
What makes a text message record more credible in court?
Completeness, continuity, and authentication. A complete thread with timestamps, showing both sides of the conversation and an unbroken chain from the original source, is far more credible than selected screenshots. Records that have not been altered or edited are essential — courts and opposing lawyers look for signs of manipulation.