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Texas Drafting Studio

You direct. The templates express. You decide.

The first early-access drafting surface outside Florida — user-directed, deterministic assembly in Texas's own vocabulary, on the software line Texas law itself draws. Term sheets for mediation and attorney review; decrees run on the official forms, always.

This product is not a substitute for the advice of an attorney.

It is consumer-operated self-help software: you select the document, supply the facts, state the objectives, and control the final text — deterministic, versioned templates express your instructions. Nothing here is legal advice, a legal opinion, or a determination that any document fits your situation, and a licensed Texas attorney can be engaged for exactly those judgments (Tex. Gov't Code § 81.101(c) states this products-not-practice line; the section's verbatim text is in this platform's hash-pinned corpus below).

§ 81.101(c) runtime-verifiedTexas software carve-out (Tex. Gov't Code § 81.101(c), verbatim-verified in the corpus) — with the clear-and-conspicuous not-a-substitute-for-an-attorney statement rendered structurally on every drafting surface.

Texas Settlement Term Sheet

Your proposed divorce terms, organized the way Texas cases resolve them.

A preparation document for mediation or attorney review — NOT a settlement agreement, NOT a Final Decree of Divorce, NOT a court filing, and it creates no binding obligations. Texas decrees run on the Supreme Court of Texas approved forms and county practice; signed settlement agreements should be drafted or reviewed by a Texas attorney.

Everything runs in your browser from your own entries — skipped optional fields simply don't render a section.

Authority locked — retrieved from the hash-pinned corpus

Tex. Gov't Code § 81.101 · #e5f234a2Tex. Fam. Code § 7.001 · #137992a3Tex. Fam. Code § 3.003 · #a4e23e62Tex. Fam. Code § 6.702 · #1e0c4ff2Tex. Fam. Code § 8.051 · #26f7dcab

What this surface is, and is not. It assembles organization-and-review instruments from your entries with deterministic, versioned templates — it prepares no court filings, certifies nothing as legally sufficient, and never decides what you should pursue. The Final Decree of Divorce and its companions run on the Supreme Court of Texas approved forms, which always control. Legal information, not legal advice.