Arizona AZ AI draft
Methodology
Community property — equal division
Arizona is a community property state where all property acquired during the marriage is presumed to be community property owned equally by both spouses. Upon divorce, community property is divided equally.
Statutory Factors
The following factors are commonly evaluated under Arizona law:
- Property acquired during marriage is community property
- Property owned before marriage is separate
- Gifts and inheritances are separate
- Commingling may affect classification
- Community estate divided equally or justly
- Debt characterization follows state rules
Statute Reference
Citation: Ariz. Rev. Stat. §25-211
Source: https://www.azleg.gov/arsDetail/?title=25
Source & verification AI draft
- Citation
- Ariz. Rev. Stat. §25-211
- Source URL
- https://www.azleg.gov/arsDetail/?title=25
- Fetched
- Not yet fetched
The SHA-256 is a tamper / identity hash on the body text we captured at fetch time — not a third-party signature. It lets us prove what we rendered matches what we observed.
Reference Library
Arizona Community Property
Arizona is a community property state governed by Ariz. Rev. Stat. §25-211. All property acquired during the marriage is presumed community property and is divided equally upon divorce. Separate property — owned before marriage or received as gift or inheritance — remains with its owner. Courts have limited discretion to deviate from the 50/50 split for community property.
Citation: Ariz. Rev. Stat. §25-211
Source: https://www.azleg.gov/arsDetail/?title=25
Last updated: 2026-05-19T01:39:53.545766