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Can I File for Divorce Online in Arizona?

Yes and no, and the distinction matters.

Clarity Divorce TeamApril 20, 20265 min read

Can I File for Divorce Online in Arizona?

Yes and no, and the distinction matters.

You can prepare all your Arizona divorce documents online, from your home, without stepping into a courthouse. The actual filing — submitting those documents to the Superior Court — still happens at the courthouse in most Arizona counties, though some counties have moved to e-filing for family law cases.

Here is what "online divorce" actually means in practice and what you should realistically expect.

What you can do completely online

Preparing your documents is the most time-consuming part of the divorce process. This is what requires understanding the forms, your financial situation, your parenting arrangement, and the legal requirements for your county.

All of this can be done online. walks you through a guided questionnaire from your couch, your kitchen table, or wherever you happen to be. You answer questions about your marriage, your finances, your children if you have them, and what you have agreed on with your spouse. The system produces completed Arizona court forms based on your answers.

You review them, download them, and you are ready to file. No courthouse required for this step.

What still requires the courthouse

Filing. In most Arizona counties, you physically take your prepared documents to the Superior Court clerk's office, pay the filing fee, and the clerk stamps and processes them. The fee is typically $300 to $400 depending on your county.

Arizona has been expanding its e-filing system (AZTurboCourt), and some counties now accept electronic filing for family law cases. If e-filing is available in your county, you can submit documents online and pay electronically. Check with your to confirm what is available.

Serving your spouse. Even in counties with e-filing, you still need to legally serve your spouse with the divorce papers. This means a process server, the county sheriff, or your spouse signing an Acceptance of Service form. No courthouse trip, but a physical step.

Potentially a hearing. Many uncontested Arizona divorces are finalized by a judge reviewing the paperwork without any hearing. Others require a brief appearance. Check your county's local rules to know what to expect.

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The 60-day waiting period does not change

Regardless of how you file — in person, e-filing, or any other method — Arizona's mandatory 60-day waiting period begins when your spouse is served. No process shortens this. The earliest your divorce can be finalized is 60 days after service.

For most uncontested divorces, the total timeline is 90 to 120 days from filing to final decree.

What "online divorce services" actually provide

You will see many services advertised as "online divorce" or "file from home." What they almost all provide is document preparation — the same service Clarity Divorce offers. They take your information, produce completed forms, and you file them.

Some also offer e-filing assistance in counties where that is available. A few are Arizona-specific. Many are generic services that produce forms for multiple states, which means the documents may not be optimized for your specific Arizona county's requirements.

Clarity Divorce is Arizona-specific. The forms are prepared based on your county and your situation. The explains exactly what documents you will receive and what each one does.

What to watch for

A few things that trip people up when filing for divorce online:

County-specific requirements vary. Maricopa County has different requirements than Pima County, Pinal County, or a rural county. A generic online divorce service may not know the difference. Make sure whatever service you use knows your specific county.

E-filing is not available everywhere. Do not assume you can file electronically. Check first.

Serving your spouse still has to happen correctly. The most common mistake in self-represented divorces is improper service. Your spouse must be served in a way that the court recognizes. An Acceptance of Service form they sign is usually the simplest option.

The decree needs to be specific. Whatever you agreed on with your spouse needs to be written clearly in the Consent Decree. Vague language in a decree creates disputes later that are expensive to resolve.

The realistic picture

For an uncontested Arizona divorce with a cooperative spouse, you can prepare all your documents online in a few hours, have your spouse sign an Acceptance of Service form, file at the courthouse once, and wait for the judge to sign off. Many people complete this process without ever going to court more than once.

That is not dramatically different from a fully in-person process, and it is far simpler than what most people imagine when they think about getting divorced.

If you are ready to start, prepares all required Arizona court documents for $199 plus court filing fees. The shows you exactly how the questionnaire works before you pay anything.


Educational guidance only — not legal advice.

Skip the paperwork. Let Clarity handle it.

Clarity Divorce fills all 7 official Arizona Supreme Court forms, plus the financial disclosure, for just $199.

Arizona Divorce Checklists

17 step-by-step checklists for every Arizona divorce situation: uncontested, military, with children, and more.

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