What This Statute Says
This is the general Arizona adverse possession statute. When the possessor cannot meet the requirements for one of the shorter periods, ten years of peaceable adverse possession with cultivation, use, or enjoyment is enough to bar the record owner.
A. A person who has a cause of action for recovery of any lands, tenements or hereditaments from a person having peaceable and adverse possession thereof, cultivating, using and enjoying such property, shall commence an action therefor within ten years after the cause of action accrues, and not afterward.
A.R.S. § 12-526When This Statute Comes Into Play
Common scenarios:
- An out-of-state heir discovers that someone has been using estate property openly for more than a decade.
- A trust holds land a neighbor has fenced and used as their own for many years.
- An estate uncovers an old boundary dispute that has been silently resolved by long-term use.
The peaceable adverse possession requirement is defined further in this section and in A.R.S. 12-521. The disability tolling rules in A.R.S. 12-528 can extend this period for minors and protected persons.
What This Means for Arizona Families
Estates and trusts often hold land that family members have not visited in years. Title issues that have slept for a decade may be impossible to revive. This statute is the reason it pays to inventory and inspect estate real property promptly after a death.
For personal representatives and trustees, the lesson is simple: act early. Walk the property. Talk to neighbors. If something looks off, get it on the title agent's radar and contact an Arizona real estate or probate attorney. Once ten years pass with an unchallenged adverse possessor, the estate's options narrow sharply. Our FAQ on managing real estate during probate or trust administration covers the practical playbook. The trustee or personal representative who treats real property as an afterthought is gambling with one of the most valuable assets in most Arizona estates.