What This Statute Says
Exemption claims under A.R.S. 33-1151 do not automatically last forever. They can end through formal action by the claimant or through a permanent move out of Arizona.
A claim of exemption under this article may be abandoned by a declaration or grant of abandonment or waiver or by permanent removal of the claimant from this state. A claimant may remove from this state for up to two years without an abandonment or waiver of the exemption.
A.R.S. § 33-1153(A)The statute draws a clear line on residency. Up to two years away is allowed without losing the protection. Beyond two years, or any permanent move, the exemption is lost.
Recording Requirement for Abandonment
Subsection B makes the formal abandonment process symmetrical with the original claim:
A declaration of abandonment, waiver or grant must be executed and acknowledged by the claimant and is effective from and after the date it is recorded in the office of the county recorder in which the claim of exemption was recorded.
A.R.S. § 33-1153(B)The same recording office that holds the original claim must receive any abandonment. The effective date is the recording date, not the signing date. Until recorded, the exemption stays in force.
When This Statute Comes Into Play
Three common scenarios trigger consideration of this statute:
- A retired Arizona resident travels extensively or maintains a second home in another state. The two-year rule provides flexibility.
- A retiree moves permanently to be closer to family. The move ends the exemption protection.
- A creditor argues that long-term absence amounts to abandonment, even without a recorded declaration.
In the last scenario, the recording requirement under subsection B works in the claimant's favor. Until a formal abandonment is recorded, the burden is on the creditor to prove a permanent move.
What This Means for Arizona Families
This statute completes the framework for the out-of-state pension tax exemption. Many Arizona retirees live partial-year lives. Some keep cabins in cooler states for summer months. Others travel to be with children or grandchildren for extended periods. The two-year allowance built into A.R.S. 33-1153 recognizes these realities.
If you have recorded an exemption claim and you are planning extended travel or a partial-year arrangement, this two-year rule sets the practical boundary. As long as Arizona remains your legal residence and you do not stay continuously away for more than two years, the exemption holds.
For families dealing with a parent who is increasingly mobile or who may eventually move to live with adult children, this matters for planning. If a permanent move out of Arizona is on the horizon, understand that the recorded exemption will end. Any out-of-state tax exposure that was previously blocked will become available to that state again. Our FAQ on retirement account decisions covers related planning questions. Speaking with an Arizona estate planning attorney before a major residency change can identify steps to take, including formal recording and a clean transition, before the protection lapses. The key Arizona protection here works alongside the broader homestead exemption framework.