Texas Court-Ordered Classes
Texas courts mandate educational programming under a comprehensive statutory framework. In custody and family proceedings, Tex. Fam. Code § 153.001 (public policy for conservatorship) and § 153.134 (standard possession order considerations) direct Texas courts to ensure the child has frequent and continuing contact with parents who act in the child’s best interest — standards that drive co-parenting education in SAPCR proceedings across Harris, Dallas, Bexar, and Tarrant County courts. Texas’s Parenting Plan requirements under the Texas Family Code and the Parent Education and Family Stabilization Course requirement under Tex. Fam. Code § 105.009 make court-ordered parenting education mandatory in many Texas divorce and custody proceedings. For criminal community supervision (probation), Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 42A.301 and art. 42A.302 authorize Texas courts to impose anger management, domestic violence intervention, and substance use education as conditions of community supervision in criminal cases across all 254 Texas counties. Family violence protective order proceedings under Tex. Fam. Code § 85.022 authorize courts to impose DV education conditions on respondents in applications for protective orders.

Complete Texas Court-Ordered Classes Requirement Online
Court Courses Co’s online platform reaches Texas residents across all counties. Programs are entirely self-paced, available 24/7 from any device. Upon completing your program, receive a timestamped Certificate of Completion documenting your name, program title, hours, and completion date — formatted for Texas District Courts, County Courts at Law, and community supervision officer submission. Texas requires that parent education courses meet specific standards under Tex. Fam. Code § 105.009; confirm whether your order requires a program from a provider meeting Texas Family Code specifications.
Court Courses Co provides Texas residents with affordable court-ordered education. One enrollment fee covers full program access, all content, and your Certificate of Completion. Texas’s geographic scale — the second-largest state — makes our online format practically essential. Whether you’re completing a parent education course requirement under Tex. Fam. Code § 105.009 from a Dallas County court, an anger management condition from a Harris County community supervision order, or a DV awareness program from a Bexar County protective order proceeding, Court Courses Co delivers equal-access, documented court education across the entire state.
Texas’s County Directory
Certain counties may have court rules or regulations that prohibit online learning options. When this applies, the class must be completed through an in-person provider rather than online. Listed below are all Texas’s counties. Counties shown in red currently do not accept certificates from online course providers:
FAQ
Where do I submit my certificate in Texas?
You must submit your certificate of completion to the Clerk of the District Court or County Court at Law in the county where your case is pending (e.g., Harris, Dallas, Bexar, Tarrant). If you are on community supervision (probation), provide the certificate directly to your Community Supervision Officer (CSO). For family law cases, the certificate may be filed as an exhibit through the eFileTexas system.
What if my Texas court order lists specific approved providers?
Under Tex. Fam. Code § 105.009, Texas judges may require parent education courses meeting specific state standards. While many Texas courts accept our certificates for anger management and general court-ordered education, confirm your order’s specific language. For Battering Intervention and Prevention Programs (BIPP), Texas requires state-certified providers listed through the Texas Council on Family Violence. If your court mandates an in-person only provider and rejects our certificate, we offer a 100% money-back guarantee.
Who Needs a Court-Ordered Course in Texas?
You may be required to complete a course in Texas if you are:
A party in a divorce or custody (SAPCR) case (mandatory Parent Education per Tex. Fam. Code § 105.009.
Participating in a Pre-Trial Diversion or Drug Court program.
Fulfilling conditions of community supervision under Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 42A.301 for misdemeanor or felony offenses.
Complying with a Protective Order involving family violence under Tex. Fam. Code § 85.022.
How Do Court-Ordered Online Classes Work?
Our Texas-specific classes are fully online and self-paced. You can start immediately on any device — no need to travel to a courthouse in Houston, Dallas, or San Antonio. The system saves your progress automatically, allowing you to finish the required hours (4, 8, 12, or 24) on your own schedule. Your official certificate is available for download the moment you finish. Enroll now to get started.
Are Online Court-Ordered Classes Accepted in Texas?
Yes, online certificates are widely accepted across Texas’s 254 counties for co-parenting education, anger management, and life skills courses. However, certain programs — such as Battering Intervention and Prevention Programs (BIPP) — require in-person, state-certified attendance. You can verify BIPP providers through the Texas Council on Family Violence. Always review the specific language of your court order. If our online format is not accepted by your judge, we provide a full refund.
Why Choose Our Court-Ordered Classes?
✅ 100% online — complete from anywhere in Texas
✅ Start immediately after enrollment
✅ Verifiable certificates accepted statewide
✅ Progress saved automatically — finish at your own pace
✅ Instant certificate download upon completion
✅ Full refund if your court does not accept our certificate
Ready to start?
Browse the full catalog of court courses and find the program to fulfill your court order now.




