Despite advances in clinical care and treatment options, adolescents with lupus continue to experience adverse health outcomes. Poor adherence to medication regimens is a major contributor to these negative outcomes. The utility of short message service (SMS) in tracking barriers to adherence prospectively remains untested for adolescents with lupus. Our objectives were (1) feasibility of incorporating a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)-compliant SMS text messaging application into REDCap and (2) acceptability of using SMS text messaging to track barriers to medication adherence in adolescents with lupus. This study is a 12-week pilot cohort study of adolescents with SLE per the 1997 revised American College of Rheumatology. A REDCap-embedded HIPAA-compliant text messaging application was used to send biweekly messages with survey link to track medication adherence. Measures were completed. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize demographics, medical, and acceptability data. Response to text messages and survey completion rates were reported as a measure of feasibility. Most eligible adolescents approached agreed to participate (n = 17, 71% enrollment rate). The cellphone ownership rate among adolescents eligible for participation was 92%. Nine subjects responded to all text messages sent (53% response and completion rate). Eleven subjects (65%) responded to two thirds of the text messages. Overall, 77% of enrolled subjects completed at least half of the surveys sent. Reminders to complete surveys were sent to 30% of enrolled adolescents. This study shows that embedding a HIPAA-compliant SMS text message application in REDCap is feasible and can be used to engage adolescents with chronic conditions in monitoring between clinic visits.