Resource Article | Arizona Divorce Process
Divorce is not just a legal filing. It is a financial reorganization, a parenting transition, a housing decision, a support analysis, and often an emotional turning point.
By Tali Best Collins, Esq. | Managing Partner, Best Law Firm
Last reviewed: June 2026
The court paperwork matters, but so does the order in which you make decisions, what you disclose, how you communicate, and whether you understand the rules before deadlines start running.
At Best Law Firm, our goal is to help Arizona families move through divorce with clarity, preparation, and a practical Game Plan. Most people do not want to spend their family savings fighting in court. They want to know what is fair, what the court can do, what documents are required, how long the process may take, and how to protect their children and finances while the case is pending.
Not every divorce follows the same route. The path depends on whether both spouses are ready to cooperate, whether they already agree on every term, whether one spouse will not respond, and whether there are disputes that require court involvement.
For spouses with a complete agreement before filing. Every required issue must be resolved before the paperwork is submitted.
For spouses who reach a full agreement after filing and service. Once the 60-day waiting period passes, the Consent Decree can be submitted.
For cases where one spouse is properly served and does not respond by the deadline. Default still requires legally complete paperwork.
For disputes that may need court involvement, including parenting issues, business valuation, support, retirement, debt, or the family home.
At least one spouse generally must have been domiciled in Arizona for 90 days before filing, or stationed in Arizona for 90 days while serving in the armed services.
The case starts with the correct Superior Court forms. After filing, the other spouse must receive legally proper notice.
The 60-day waiting period is the time to gather documents, exchange disclosure, address temporary needs, and evaluate settlement.
Property, debt, support, legal decision making, parenting time, insurance, tax issues, and child support must all be addressed.
A divorce can resolve by agreement, default, or trial. Many contested cases still settle after disclosure, mediation, or temporary orders.
Arizona statutes and court forms generally use the term dissolution of marriage. In everyday language, that means divorce: the legal end of a marriage by court order. The final order is called a Decree of Dissolution of Marriage. A signed agreement between spouses is not enough by itself. A judge must sign the decree and the court must file it.
For a non-covenant marriage, Arizona is a no-fault divorce state. The court must find that the marriage is irretrievably broken rather than assigning blame for the breakup. Marital misconduct generally is not the standard for dividing community property. That does not mean conduct is never relevant. Safety issues, waste of community assets, domestic violence, child abuse, financial concealment, substance abuse, and parenting behavior can matter where the law makes them relevant.
Before Arizona can enter a divorce decree, at least one spouse must have been domiciled in Arizona for 90 days before filing, or must have been stationed in Arizona for 90 days while serving in the armed services. Source: A.R.S. § 25-312(A)(1).
A divorce case in the Valley begins when the correct paperwork is filed with the Superior Court in the appropriate county. Arizona provides statewide family law forms, but counties may have local preferences, additional forms, procedures, or filing requirements. Always confirm requirements with the clerk of the court in the county where the case will be filed or with a lawyer who practices there.
The required forms depend on whether the spouses have minor children together and whether the case is filed as a standard dissolution or Summary Consent Decree. Common starting documents include the Petition for Dissolution, Summons, Sensitive Data Cover Sheet, Preliminary Injunction, Health Insurance Notice, Creditor Notice, and if minor children are involved, an Affidavit Regarding Minor Children, parenting plan forms, and parent education notices.
After filing, the other spouse must receive legally proper notice. This is called service of process. Service can happen through a process server, sheriff, acceptance of service, or another method allowed by the rules. The exact method matters because deadlines are measured from service or acceptance of service, not merely from the date the petition was prepared.
A spouse served in Arizona generally has 20 days after service to file a response.
A spouse served outside Arizona generally has 30 days. Missing a response deadline can put the served spouse at risk of default.
Arizona law states that the court cannot enter a decree of dissolution until 60 days after service or acceptance of service. This is the earliest possible date, not a promise that every case will finish on day 61. Source: A.R.S. § 25-329.
The waiting period is not dead time. In a well-managed case, it is when the parties organize the case, exchange information, learn about finances and child issues, address temporary needs, and decide whether settlement is possible through agreements or mediation.
Talk with Tali Best Collins by the hour without a retainer. Bring documents, questions, a court date, or a settlement offer.
Best Law Firm has certified and experienced family law attorney mediators. The firm has been part of 5,000 mediations/settlements.
Full representation is available when your case requires it. Best Law Firm has been part of close to 1,000 trials in 19 years in business.
Arizona divorce settlements depend on accurate information and full knowledge of the law. You cannot divide property fairly, calculate support accurately, or negotiate intelligently without documents. In contested family law cases, disclosure obligations are governed by the Arizona Rules of Family Law Procedure, and both parties should expect to share relevant financial information.
A practical disclosure package can often include pay stubs, W-2s, 1099s, K-1s, tax returns, bank and investment account statements, retirement account information, mortgage statements, deeds, appraisals, vehicle titles, loan statements, credit cards, tax debt, student loans, insurance policies, childcare costs, and business valuation materials when a business is involved.
Arizona is a community property state. As a starting point, property acquired during marriage is community property and divided equitably unless it fits an exception, such as property acquired by gift, devise, or descent, or property acquired after service of a divorce petition when the petition results in a decree. Property owned before marriage is generally separate property, but tracing, commingling, community liens, and reimbursement claims can complicate the analysis. See A.R.S. § 25-211.
When the court divides property, Arizona law requires the court to assign each spouse’s sole and separate property to that spouse and divide community, joint tenancy, and other property held in common equitably, though not necessarily in kind, and without regard to marital misconduct. Equitable means fair under the law. It does not always mean every asset is split exactly down the middle. See A.R.S. § 25-318(A).
Arizona no longer uses custody as the main legal label in most family law orders. The modern terms are legal decision making and parenting time. Legal decision making is the authority to make major decisions for a child. Parenting time is the schedule for when each parent has the child. Source: A.R.S. § 25-401.
If parents cannot agree on a parenting plan, Arizona law requires each parent to submit a proposed plan and the court must adopt a plan consistent with the child’s best interests. A parenting plan should cover legal decision making, a practical schedule, holidays, school breaks, exchanges, transportation, communication, dispute resolution, relocation procedures, review procedures, and other child-specific needs. Source: A.R.S. § 25-403.02.
Learn about child custody, parenting time, and legal decision making.
Spousal maintenance, often called alimony, is not automatic in every Arizona divorce. The court first decides whether the requesting spouse qualifies under Arizona law. If eligibility is established, the court then analyzes amount and duration.
Eligibility grounds include situations where the spouse seeking maintenance lacks sufficient property to provide for reasonable needs, cannot be self-sufficient through appropriate employment, is caring for a child whose circumstances make outside employment inappropriate, lacks adequate earning ability, contributed to the other spouse’s educational opportunities, or had a long marriage and is of an age that may preclude adequate employment. Source: A.R.S. § 25-319.
Read more about spousal maintenance.
A divorce can resolve by agreement, default, or trial. The best route depends on the facts, the level of conflict, and whether both spouses are willing to exchange information and negotiate in good faith.
When spouses reach a complete agreement, they can submit a Consent Decree and related documents for the judge to review and sign after the 60-day waiting period. The decree should not be vague. A strong decree gives dates, dollar amounts, account numbers where appropriate, refinance or sale deadlines, parenting time schedules, tax provisions, support start dates, insurance obligations, and enforcement language.
If settlement fails, the judge decides disputed issues at trial. In family court, the judge, not a jury, decides the case.
The divorce is final when the judge signs the Decree of Dissolution, the Property Settlement Agreement, and the Parenting Plan if children are involved. These documents should resolve every required issue, including property, debt, spousal maintenance, legal decision making and parenting time, child support, insurance, tax issues, name restoration if requested, and any other terms necessary for a complete order.
After the decree, there is still work to do. Transfer titles, prepare retirement division orders such as QDROs if required, refinance or sell real property by the decree deadline, update insurance and beneficiaries, set up child support payments through the Clearinghouse, and calendar future deadlines.
Book your $100 consultation with Tali Best Collins and leave with a clearer understanding of your options, risks, and next steps.
Arizona court forms and statutes generally call divorce a dissolution of marriage. The final order is the Decree of Dissolution of Marriage, often accompanied by a Property Settlement Agreement and Parenting Plan when children are involved.
At least one spouse must have been domiciled in Arizona for 90 days before filing, or stationed in Arizona for 90 days while serving in the armed services.
The court cannot enter the final decree until at least 60 days after service or acceptance of service. A fully agreed case may be eligible shortly after that if every required document is complete and the judge approves it.
No. One spouse can proceed if the marriage is irretrievably broken. If the other spouse does not respond after proper service, default may be available. Covenant marriage is different and requires a separate analysis.
Legal decision making is authority over major child decisions such as education, medical care, and religious upbringing. Parenting time is the schedule for when each parent has the child. Joint legal decision making does not automatically mean equal parenting time.
No. The court first decides whether the requesting spouse qualifies under Arizona law. If eligibility is established, the court analyzes amount and duration using statute, evidence, and Arizona spousal maintenance guidelines.
Arizona is a community property state. Property acquired during the marriage is generally community property and divided equitably, usually equally. Separate property owned before marriage or received by gift or inheritance is generally not divided, but tracing and commingling can complicate the analysis.
A decree can allocate responsibility for debts between spouses, but creditors are not automatically bound by the divorce decree if both spouses remain contractually responsible on the debt.
Sometimes filing first helps with timing, preparation, temporary orders, courthouse location, presentation of evidence first in a hearing, or strategic framing. Other times it does not matter much. The better question is whether you understand the legal, financial, and parenting consequences before anyone files.
This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Arizona family law outcomes depend on the facts of each case, current statutes, court rules, local procedures, and judicial discretion. Consult an Arizona family law attorney before filing, responding, signing an agreement, or missing a deadline.
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