Arizona · Family Court

Family Court in Arizona — Divorce, Custody & Child Support

Arizona family court: 90 days in state before filing to file for divorce, fee $300+. Custody, support, and property division guide.

Key Filing Facts

Court Name

Arizona Superior Court (Family Court Division)

Filing Fee

$300–$350

Response Deadline

20 days after service

Hearing Timeline

60–120 days after filing

Statute

ARS §25-312 et seq.

Official Court Website →

✓ Verified as of 2026-03-30

Overview

Arizona Superior Court (Family Court Division) handles family law matters. Cases here include dissolution of marriage (divorce), legal separation, child custody and parenting time, child support, spousal maintenance, community property division, and orders of protection. Family court proceedings are among the most consequential civil matters a person navigates — decisions made here affect children, property, and financial stability for years. Arizona is a community property jurisdiction — most assets and debts accumulated during the marriage are divided equally between spouses. Arizona offers covenant marriage, a legally distinct marriage form requiring counseling and specific fault grounds or longer separation to dissolve. Arizona is a community property state — most assets and debts acquired during the marriage are split equally. Covenant marriage is available in Arizona and requires fault grounds or counseling to dissolve. Mediation is typically required before contested custody hearings. ThreadLock helps you organize the documentation that family court decisions depend on: incident records, communication logs, financial records, and a chronological account of events — the kind of organized case file that moves proceedings forward and supports your position.

Filing & Fees

Either spouse may file for divorce or family law relief in Arizona. Unmarried parents may also file custody and support cases without a divorce proceeding. Residency requirement: 90 days in state before filing. Only one spouse needs to meet the residency requirement. Fee waivers are available for those who cannot afford the filing fee. As a community property jurisdiction, both spouses have equal ownership interests in property acquired during the marriage — this affects how financial documents and records should be gathered before filing. Arizona requires mediation before contested hearings on custody or parenting matters. Both parties must participate in good faith. Documenting your position and the history of disputes in advance of mediation is as important as preparing for court. Self-represented litigants (pro se) are permitted in Arizona family court. If children are involved, the court will also consider their best interests independently, regardless of what the parties agree to.

Filing Process

To begin a family court case in Arizona, file the petition or complaint for divorce, custody, or support with the Arizona Superior Court (Family Court Division). The filing fee is $300–$350. After filing, serve the petition on the other party.

Waiting period: 60 days after service of petition. The respondent has 20 days after service to file a response or answer. If the respondent does not respond, you may seek a default judgment. If they respond and contested issues remain, the court will schedule conferences and hearings.

Before any contested custody or parenting hearing, mediation is required. Both parties must participate in good faith before the matter proceeds to a judge. Typical timeline from filing to resolution: 60–120 days after filing.

All agreements on custody, support, and property division must be approved by the court — parties cannot simply agree privately and consider the matter closed. Orders and decrees are legally enforceable, and violations can result in contempt proceedings.

Evidence Standards

Critical

Family court decisions depend heavily on documentation. The Arizona Superior Court (Family Court Division) considers evidence of parenting history, financial circumstances, living conditions, and the pattern of the relationship when making orders about dissolution of marriage (divorce), legal separation, child custody and parenting time, child support, spousal maintenance, community property division, and orders of protection.

The most important documents in family court cases include: the marriage certificate, financial statements (income, assets, debts), tax returns, property records, communications between parties (emails, texts), records of parenting time and exchanges, documentation of any incidents of domestic violence or substance abuse, and evidence of each parent's relationship with the children. In community property cases, financial records — bank statements, retirement account balances, property purchase dates, and debt origination dates — are critical to establishing what is community property versus separate property.

The most overlooked evidence in custody and parenting cases is the contemporaneous record — notes written at the time of an incident, not reconstructed afterward. Courts give more weight to records that were created in real time than to summaries written later. ThreadLock's incident journal lets you log events the day they happen, attach photos or documents, and build a timestamped record that holds up to scrutiny. The timeline builder organizes those entries chronologically, and the exhibit export tool packages everything into a labeled PDF ready for court or mediation.

Common Questions

How long must I live in Arizona before I can file for divorce?

90 days in state before filing. Filing before meeting this requirement will result in the court dismissing your case for lack of jurisdiction. Only one spouse needs to meet the residency requirement.

How long does the divorce process take in Arizona?

Waiting period: 60 days after service of petition. After that, an uncontested divorce can often finalize quickly if all issues are agreed. Contested divorces involving children or disputed property can take significantly longer.

How does Arizona determine child custody?

Arizona family courts use the best interests of the child standard. Factors include each parent's relationship with the child, the child's current living situation and stability, each parent's ability to meet the child's needs, and the child's own preferences (depending on age and maturity). Courts generally prefer arrangements that allow children to maintain relationships with both parents unless safety concerns require otherwise.

How is property divided in a Arizona divorce?

Arizona is a community property jurisdiction. Most property acquired during the marriage — including income, real estate, and retirement accounts accumulated during the marriage — is divided equally (50/50) between the spouses regardless of whose name it is in. Property owned before the marriage or received as a gift or inheritance may be treated as separate property.

What does it cost to file for divorce in Arizona?

The court filing fee is $300–$350. This does not include attorney fees, mediation costs, or other court fees that may apply. Fee waivers are available for those who qualify based on financial hardship — ask the court clerk for the application.

Is mediation required in Arizona family court?

Yes — mediation is required before contested custody or parenting hearings in Arizona. Both parties must participate in good faith. Mediation is confidential and what is discussed cannot generally be used as evidence in court. If mediation fails to resolve the dispute, the matter proceeds to a judge.

Get organized before your hearing.

ThreadLock helps you document incidents, organize evidence, and prepare court-ready materials, so you walk in prepared.