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How Long Does Divorce Take in Arizona? Real Timelines for 2026

The question almost everyone asks first: how long is this going to take? The honest answer depends on one thing more than anything else: whether you and your...

Clarity Divorce TeamMarch 19, 20266 min read

How Long Does Divorce Take in Arizona? Real Timelines for 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Arizona has a mandatory 60-day waiting period. No judge can finalize your divorce before it ends.
  • The clock starts when your spouse is served, not when you file. Slow service means a longer wait.
  • Uncontested divorces typically finish in 90 to 120 days total.
  • Contested divorces take 1 to 3 years. Every unresolved disagreement adds time.
  • You cannot waive the waiting period, but you can eliminate every other delay with good preparation.

The question almost everyone asks first: how long is this going to take? The honest answer depends on one thing more than anything else: whether you and your spouse agree on the terms.

The 60-Day Waiting Period Explained

Arizona law requires a minimum 60-day waiting period before a judge can sign off on any divorce. This applies to every case, uncontested or not. There are no exceptions.

The clock starts the day after your spouse is served with the divorce papers. Not when you file. Not when you call your spouse to tell them you filed. The day after official legal service is complete.

This matters more than most people realize. If you file today but it takes three weeks to arrange service, you have pushed your earliest possible finish date back three weeks. The fastest way to start the clock is to have your spouse sign an Acceptance of Service as soon as possible after you file, ideally the same day.

Uncontested Divorce: 90 to 120 Days

An uncontested divorce is one where both spouses agree on all major terms: property division, debt allocation, and (if you have children) custody and support. When you are aligned on the outcome, the court process is straightforward.

Here is the typical flow:

  1. File the Petition and supporting documents with your county Superior Court. Pay the filing fee (around $300 to $400 depending on your county).
  2. Arrange service on your spouse. The 60-day clock starts the day after this happens.
  3. Complete the Affidavit of Financial Information (AFI). Both spouses must fill this out. It is a detailed sworn financial disclosure covering income, expenses, assets, and debts. Our walks through every section.
  4. Prepare the Consent Decree. This is the final settlement agreement that covers everything you agreed on. Once signed, you submit it for the judge's signature.
  5. Judge reviews and signs. After day 60 passes and your paperwork is complete, the judge signs the Consent Decree and your divorce is final.

From start to finish: 90 to 120 days for most uncontested cases. The variation comes from how quickly service is completed and how long the court takes to process final paperwork, which varies by county and caseload.

Free Arizona Divorce Checklist

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Contested Divorce: 1 to 3 Years (or More)

When spouses disagree on significant issues, whether it is who gets the house, how much support one spouse should pay, or a parenting schedule for the kids, the case becomes contested. That changes the timeline dramatically.

Contested cases enter the court's litigation track. That means discovery (exchanging financial documents and evidence), status conferences, settlement conferences, and possibly a trial. Arizona courts are busy, and scheduling a trial can take a year or more on its own.

A few things that can push a contested case past two years:

  • Complex asset division involving a business, retirement accounts, or real estate
  • Disagreements over spousal maintenance
  • Custody disputes requiring a parenting evaluation
  • Either party changing attorneys mid-case

If there is any chance you and your spouse can reach an agreement, pursuing an is worth the effort. The time and cost difference is enormous.

What Slows Down an Otherwise Simple Case

Even uncontested divorces can take longer than expected when paperwork problems get in the way.

Common delays:

  • AFI errors or missing information. The court will kick back an inaccurate or incomplete Affidavit of Financial Information. You fix it, refile it, and lose days or weeks in the process.
  • Wrong forms. Arizona counties have specific form requirements. Filing an outdated version or the wrong county's forms results in rejection.
  • Missing signatures. Every document that requires a signature must have it. A missing signature on the Consent Decree means your final paperwork gets rejected.
  • Service delays. If your spouse is uncooperative or hard to locate, service can take weeks, and the 60-day clock has not started yet.

Each of these is preventable. The covers the full set of forms so nothing gets missed.

What You Can Actually Control

You cannot make the waiting period shorter. What you can control:

Start the clock immediately. Have your spouse sign an Acceptance of Service the day you file, or arrange a process server for the next day. Every day of delay in service is a day added to the end.

Get the AFI right the first time. Gather your financial documents before you start the form: pay stubs, bank statements, tax returns, a list of every account and debt. Rushing through the AFI and getting it rejected is one of the most common sources of avoidable delay.

Have your Consent Decree ready to go. As soon as day 60 passes, you want your final paperwork queued up and ready to submit. Waiting until after the waiting period ends to start drafting it adds unnecessary time.

Use a document preparation service. Clarity Divorce generates all your required Arizona divorce forms, including the Petition, Summons, AFI, and Consent Decree, formatted correctly for your county. If you are going the , having correct paperwork from the start is the biggest single thing you can do to keep your timeline on track.

How Clarity Divorce Helps

Clarity Divorce was built to make the paperwork side of an uncontested Arizona divorce fast and accurate. You answer a guided questionnaire about your situation, and the platform generates your complete document package, ready to file. The flat fee is $299, plus your county's court filing fee.

Your forms are formatted for your county, completed based on your specific details, and ready in minutes. Getting the paperwork right the first time is the best move you can make for keeping your timeline as short as possible.

Educational guidance only. This is 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 $299.

Arizona Divorce Checklists

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

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