Transfers, purchases, and inherited property
Arizona Deeds
How your property is titled determines whether it avoids probate. We prepare and record the right deed for your situation.
Your Property, Titled Right
Real estate is often the most valuable asset in an estate plan. A home worth $500,000 can pass seamlessly to your heirs or get tangled in months of probate, depending entirely on how the deed is written. Choosing the wrong deed, or failing to record it correctly, can create title defects, tax complications, and legal disputes that take years to resolve. Arizona recognizes several deed types, and each one serves a specific legal purpose.
A deed is not just a piece of paper. It is the legal title that determines who owns your property and how it transfers. Getting it wrong can cost your family thousands.
The Deed Types We Prepare
Each deed serves a different purpose. We confirm the right one for your situation, prepare it for signing, and record it with your Arizona county.
- Beneficiary deed, names who inherits your property at death without going through probate
- Trust transfer deed, moves your home into your living trust so it funds the trust correctly
- Quitclaim deed, transfers whatever interest you hold, often used between spouses or family
- Warranty deed, conveys property with a guarantee of clear title, common in arms-length sales
Why It Matters
Most Arizona homes are now worth more than $400,000. That alone is enough to trigger probate if the deed does not handle it. We have prepared more than 5,000 deeds, signed and notarized in a single visit at our office, then recorded with Maricopa, Pima, or whichever county holds the property.
A deed is not just a piece of paper: it is the legal title that determines who owns your property and how it transfers. Getting it wrong can cost your family thousands.
Common Deed Situations in Arizona
If you own real estate in Arizona, one of these likely applies to you.
- Trust Owners. Your home must be retitled into your living trust to avoid probate.
- Home Buyers. Taking title correctly from the start protects your investment.
- Inherited Property. Transferring inherited real estate requires specific documentation.
- Married Couples. Community property designations can simplify transfers and reduce taxes.
Your First Step Starts Here
At our live, free estate planning seminars across Phoenix and Tucson, we walk you through how to protect you and your loved ones from probate. We give you a step-by-step plan that's simple and clear. Sign up today for peace of mind tomorrow.
Client Testimonials
Common Arizona Deeds Questions
Answers to the questions Arizona families ask most about arizona deeds.
Keep Learning
Continue Reading
From the Blog
- Is a Beneficiary Deed Enough? When Arizona Homeowners Actually Need a Trust
A beneficiary deed is the right tool for some homeowners and the wrong tool for others. Here is the dividing line.
- Can You Put a House in a Trust With a Mortgage?
Yes, in Arizona, and the federal Garn-St. Germain Act is the reason. The full mechanics.
- Community Property With Right of Survivorship in Arizona: How It Works and When You Need More
Why this title form is powerful for spouses, and what it leaves on the table.
Glossary
- Beneficiary Deed
An Arizona deed that names who inherits your property at death without going through probate.
- Quitclaim Deed
A deed that transfers whatever interest the grantor holds, with no warranty about the title.
- Warranty Deed
A deed where the grantor guarantees clear title and stands behind it.
- Deed of Trust
Arizona's standard mortgage instrument, used by lenders to secure a loan against real property.
- Community Property with Right of Survivorship
An Arizona title form for spouses that combines marital property treatment with automatic transfer at death.
- Joint Tenancy
A form of co-ownership where the surviving owner automatically receives the deceased owner's share.
