3 Things I Wish I Knew Before Filing for Divorce in Arizona
Key Takeaways
- The 60-day waiting period starts when your spouse is served, not when you file. Plan accordingly.
- The Affidavit of Financial Information (AFI) is more detailed than most people expect. Start gathering documents early.
- An uncontested divorce in Arizona can cost under $700 total. You do not need to spend thousands on attorneys if you and your spouse agree.
- Preparation and knowledge are the two biggest factors in keeping your divorce affordable and on track.
Nobody hands you a checklist when you decide to file for divorce. Most people figure things out as they go, and some of the lessons come at exactly the wrong time. After working with hundreds of Arizona filers, these are the three things that catch people off guard most often.
1. The Waiting Period Does Not Start When You Think It Does
Arizona has a mandatory 60-day waiting period before a judge can finalize your divorce. Most people assume the clock starts ticking the day they walk into the courthouse and file their Petition. It does not.
The 60 days begin the day after your spouse is officially served with the divorce papers. That means if it takes you two weeks to arrange service (hiring a process server, tracking down your spouse, or waiting for them to sign an Acceptance of Service), you have already lost two weeks.
Here is the practical timeline:
- You file the Petition for Dissolution with your county Superior Court.
- You arrange service of process on your spouse. This can happen the same day or take several weeks.
- The 60-day clock starts the day after service is completed.
- After day 60, you can submit your final paperwork (Consent Decree or Application for Default) for the judge to sign.
What to do about it: Have a plan for service before you file. If your spouse is cooperative, ask them to sign an Acceptance of Service the same day or soon after you file. That starts the clock immediately and saves you the cost of a process server ($50 to $100). For the full step-by-step process, see our .
2. The Financial Disclosure Is More Involved Than You Expect
Every Arizona divorce requires both spouses to complete an Affidavit of Financial Information (AFI). This is a sworn document that lays out your entire financial life: income, monthly expenses, assets, debts, everything.