If you work with families and have looked for a tool to extend the work between sessions, you have probably found the same gap. The scheduling apps are good for logistics and useless for behavior. The chore apps have no practitioner visibility. The behavior tracking apps were built for educators, not for family therapists. The parenting apps target parents directly and give you no view of what is actually happening between sessions.
A parenting app for therapists, a tool that bridges the clinical session and the home environment, gives practitioners visibility into family behavior data, and runs a behavioral framework appropriate for clinical recommendation, does not fit neatly into any existing app category. Most of what is available falls short of one or more requirements that clinical use demands.
This guide covers the six criteria that matter for clinical evaluation. It does not tell you what to choose. It tells you what to evaluate, so you can make that decision on the basis of something more useful than a product marketing page.
What are the criteria for evaluating a family structure tool for clinical use?
1. Is the behavioral framework supported by the research?
The first question to ask about any tool you recommend clinically is whether the approach it implements is evidence-based. Token economies and positive reinforcement frameworks have an extensive research record across clinical, educational, and family settings. A tool that implements these principles in a technically sound way, specific behavioral targets, child-chosen rewards, consistent earn and consequence mechanisms, is one you can recommend with professional confidence.
A tool that dresses up a simple task tracker in behavioral language without implementing the actual mechanisms is a different thing. The distinction matters when a client family asks why you are recommending this approach, and when you need to document the evidence base for your clinical notes.
What to look for: specific behavioral targets (not vague goals), an earn mechanism tied to observable behaviors, a consequence mechanism that is mild and automatic rather than punitive and discretionary, and a documented connection to the positive reinforcement literature. The evidence base for token economies guide covers this in full for practitioners who want a research-grounded summary.
2. Can the therapist see what is happening between sessions?
This is the criterion that eliminates the majority of available tools. Most family apps, including apps with good behavior management features, were designed for parents, not for practitioners working with those parents. There is no practitioner dashboard, no access to the family's data, no visibility between sessions.
Without practitioner visibility, the tool is a black box between sessions. You recommend it, the family uses it or does not, and you learn what happened when the family tells you at the next appointment. That is self-report, with all of its limitations. A tool with a practitioner dashboard gives you the actual data, the same record the family has, which is a categorically different working relationship with the information.
What to look for: a practitioner-specific account type (not a shared family account you somehow observe), access to violation logs and token balances without needing the family to send you anything, and clear data on which parent is logging what.
3. Does the tool require and support both parents?
Parenting alignment is not a peripheral concern in family therapy. It is frequently the primary clinical issue. A tool that one parent can run independently, while the other has no role in the system, does not address the alignment variable, it accommodates it.
A tool that requires both parents to participate from shared data is structurally implementing one of the most important clinical goals in family work: the two adults in the household operating from the same information at the same time. A family where both parents are logging from the same app, and seeing the same child data, is functionally different from a family where one parent tracks and one observes. The alignment gap does not close because a tool exists. It closes because the tool makes the asymmetry visible and actionable.
For practitioners, this criterion has a practical test: can you tell from the dashboard which parent is and is not engaging? If the answer is no, the tool was not designed with clinical alignment work in mind.
What to look for: both parents as full account holders with access to the same data, a log that shows which parent completed which actions, and a design that breaks if only one parent uses it (which means it was designed for two-parent use from the start, not adapted as an afterthought).
4. Is the reward system developmentally appropriate?
A token economy that works for a six-year-old does not work the same way for a fourteen-year-old. The motivational drivers differ. The reward menu needs to reflect genuine preferences at the child's developmental stage. The behavioral targets need to be calibrated to what the child is developmentally capable of. And the consequence mechanism needs to be appropriate to the child's capacity for understanding and self-regulation.
What to look for: a reward menu the child builds themselves (not a preset list), earn rates that can be adjusted as the child develops, and a consequence mechanism that requires behavioral practice rather than punishment.
5. How is family data handled?
Your clients are sharing sensitive behavioral data about their children and their family dynamics. You are potentially connected to that data in your professional capacity. Data privacy standards are not a product marketing consideration, they are a professional ethics matter.
In many jurisdictions, a practitioner who accesses client data through a third-party platform has professional obligations about how that data is handled. Review the tool's privacy policy before recommending it, and document that you did.
What to look for: clear data handling policies, data residency information (where is the data stored), clarity on who can access the data and under what conditions, and what happens to the data if the family stops using the product. Ask the provider directly if the documentation does not answer these questions clearly.
6. Is the cost accessible for the families in your caseload?
A tool you recommend that a family cannot afford, or will not pay for after the first month, does not extend your work. It creates a two-session engagement where the family sets up a system they then abandon when the cost becomes real.
What to look for: transparent pricing, a free trial long enough for the family to establish whether the system works for them, and a monthly cost that is realistic for the socioeconomic profile of your typical caseload. famio is currently $20 per month with a 7-day free trial. Practitioner accounts are free at every plan level.
How does famio measure up against these six criteria?
Evidence base. famio implements a token economy: specific behavioral targets, child-chosen rewards, automatic earn and consequence mechanisms, and a Habit Cards system that assigns positive behavioral practice activities after rule violations. The approach is documented in the evidence base guide.
Practitioner visibility. The famio practitioner dashboard gives connected therapists and coaches access to violation logs, token balances, Habit Card streaks, responsibility completion rates, and parental logging asymmetry between sessions. Accounts are free and the connection process takes under five minutes.
Both-parent design. Both parents are full account holders with identical access to the same data. The system requires both parents to log from the same document. Parental logging asymmetry is visible in the dashboard as a data point.
Developmental appropriateness. The reward menu is built by the child with guidance from the parents. Earn rates are fully adjustable. The consequence mechanism assigns Habit Cards, positive practice activities, not punishments, calibrated to the specific violation.
Data privacy. Data is stored on Supabase infrastructure. Full data handling documentation is available at famio.tech. Practitioners should review this documentation and assess it against their jurisdiction's professional ethics requirements before recommending the tool to clients.
Cost. $20 per month, 7-day free trial. Practitioner accounts are permanently free.
The criteria matter more than the tool. A practitioner who knows what they are evaluating will make a better recommendation than one who is choosing between marketing pages.




