Privacy Policy
Legal privacy policies usually hide the truth behind dense jargon and confusing clauses. We refuse to operate that way. You deserve to know exactly what happens to your information when you visit Family Law Centerz. This document outlines our data practices with absolute clarity. We handle your digital privacy with the same gravity we apply to family law matters.
Effective date: May 23, 2026.
Your privacy is a right, not a negotiation.
We wrote this policy to explain the mechanics of our website. You leave a digital footprint every time you browse the internet. We keep our tracking minimal, intentional, and strictly focused on improving your experience. We do not harvest data for the sake of hoarding it.
The Information We Actually Collect
You can read our guides on estate planning and trust creation without giving us any personal details. We do not force you to create an account to access our resources. When you decide to reach out, we collect specific information to facilitate that conversation.
If you submit a question through our contact form, we ask for your name and your email address. We also provide a text box for you to describe your situation. You dictate how much detail you share. We need this basic information to reply to your inquiry.
We also collect behavioral data through analytics software. This includes your IP address, your browser type, and the specific pages you visit on our site. We track how long you stay on a page. We monitor which links you click.
We track clicks. We measure engagement. We improve our resources.
We use Google Analytics and Google Search Console to gather this behavioral data. We do this to improve content quality. If five hundred people visit our guide on the Maryland Discretionary Trust Act and leave within ten seconds, that page failed. The data illuminates our blind spots. We take that feedback, rewrite the article, and make it actually useful for the next reader.
How We Use Your Data
We collect your information to run this website effectively. We use your email address to answer the specific questions you ask. If you message us asking how to secure your assets with a trust attorney in Florida, we read it. We reply with relevant guidance. We do not add your email to an endless, automated marketing funnel.
The family law space suffers from a massive problem with predatory data brokers. Many legal directories take your contact form submission and immediately sell it to the highest bidder. Your phone starts ringing instantly. We despise that practice.
We never sell your personal information.
We do not trade your email address to third-party lead generation companies. We do not rent our contact lists. The information you share with Family Law Centerz stays with Family Law Centerz. We use it solely to communicate with you and to optimize our editorial content.
Cookies and the Friction of Tracking
Cookies power the modern web. They also create a massive vulnerability for user privacy when abused. We use cookies responsibly to keep our site functional and to understand our audience.
A cookie is a small text file saved to your device when you load our website. We use two specific types. Functional cookies keep the site running smoothly. They remember your preferences and ensure the pages load correctly on your mobile phone or desktop computer.
Analytics cookies help us cut through the noise. They aggregate visitor data so we can spot broad trends. We look at this data from a high-resolution perspective. We do not know your name just because you read our page on setting up a trust account. We only see that an anonymous user found the information valuable.
You control your browser. You can block these cookies at any time through your browser settings. Blocking functional cookies will break certain features on our site. Blocking analytics cookies simply means your visit remains entirely invisible to our traffic reports.
Third-Party Services We Trust
No website operates in a vacuum. We rely on a few external tools to keep Family Law Centerz online and secure. These third-party services process data on our behalf. We vet them rigorously.
We use Google Analytics to understand our traffic. We use secure hosting providers to store our website files and database. We use a dedicated email service provider to route the messages you send through our contact form.
These companies act as data processors. They handle the technical heavy lifting. They do not have free rein to exploit your information. They are bound by strict data processing agreements that prohibit them from using your data for their own independent marketing purposes.
Your Rights Regarding Your Data
You own your personal information. You dictate how we handle it. We respect your rights under modern privacy frameworks, regardless of your physical location.
You have the right to access the data we hold about you. You have the right to request corrections if that data is inaccurate. Most importantly, you have the right to be forgotten.
If you emailed us last spring asking about a complex estate plan and you want that correspondence wiped from our servers, tell us. We will delete it. We do not force you to jump through bureaucratic hoops. You make the request, we verify your identity, and we purge the record.
Security and the Weight of Responsibility
Family law involves highly sensitive realities. We treat your digital data with the exact same gravity. We implement strict security measures to protect your information from unauthorized access.
We force HTTPS encryption across the entire website. This ensures that any data passing between your browser and our server remains scrambled and unreadable to interceptors. We update our software constantly to patch known vulnerabilities. We restrict administrative access to our core editorial team.
No system is impenetrable. We secure our servers and lock down our databases, but the internet carries inherent risks. If a data breach occurs that compromises your personal information, we will notify you immediately. We will explain what happened, what data was exposed, and what steps we are taking to fix it.
The Legal Boundary
Reading this website does not establish an attorney-client relationship. Submitting a contact form does not make us your retained lawyer. We provide editorial information, not formal legal representation.
Do not send highly confidential financial documents, social security numbers, or sensitive asset details through our basic contact form. Wait until you have signed a formal retainer agreement with a qualified attorney before sharing that level of granularity.
We built this site to provide clarity and compassion. We want you to understand how trusts work and how to protect your family. We cannot protect your data if you broadcast sensitive legal secrets through an unencrypted web form. Use common sense when reaching out.
Contact Us for Data Requests
Questions about your data deserve real answers from real people. If you have concerns about this privacy policy or want to exercise your data rights, reach out to us directly.
Send an email to our privacy team. We monitor this inbox daily. We reply to all data requests within 48 hours. We do not use automated bots to handle privacy concerns.
We review this policy regularly. When we change our data practices, we update this page. We do not hide policy shifts in the fine print. We operate in the open, because transparency is the only way to build lasting trust.