Arizona Divorce Timeline: The 60-Day Rule Explained
Key Takeaways
- Arizona law requires a mandatory 60-day waiting period before any divorce can be finalized.
- The clock starts the day after your spouse is served, not the day you file.
- The waiting period cannot be waived, shortened, or bypassed by either spouse or any judge.
- The 60 days are not idle time. They are when you complete your financial disclosures and finalize your settlement terms.
- Having paperwork ready at day 60 is the difference between finishing in 90 days or dragging on for months more.
Most people filing for divorce in Arizona want to know one thing: how fast can this be over? The 60-day waiting period is the answer to half that question. Here is exactly what it means, when it starts, and how to make the most of it.
What Is the 60-Day Rule?
Under Arizona law, a judge cannot finalize a divorce before 60 days have passed from the date the responding spouse was served. This is a statutory requirement, not a court preference or a scheduling quirk.
It applies to every divorce filed in Arizona:
- Uncontested divorces where both spouses already agree on everything
- Divorces without children
- Cases where the responding spouse accepts service immediately
There are no exceptions. A judge cannot sign the final Decree of Dissolution before the waiting period ends, regardless of how simple the case is or how quickly both spouses want to move on.
When Does the Clock Start?
This is the detail that surprises most people.
The 60-day clock starts the day after your spouse is officially served with the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage and Summons. It does not start when you file. It does not start when your spouse becomes aware a case has been filed. It starts the day after legal service is complete.
This distinction matters. If you file today and it takes 14 days to complete service, your earliest possible finish date is 74 days from now, not 60.
How to Start the Clock as Fast as Possible
The fastest option is an Acceptance of Service. Your spouse signs a form confirming they received the divorce papers. This can be done the same day you file, often before you leave the courthouse. Once that signed form is filed with the court, the clock starts the next day.
If your spouse is cooperative and you have already talked through the process together, this is the simplest path. It costs nothing and eliminates all service delays.
If your spouse will not sign voluntarily, you can use a licensed process server (typically $50 to $100) or the county sheriff's office. Both options usually complete within a few days to a week.