State of Arizona Probate Court Case Search & Records 2026

Official Arizona probate court guide

Find Arizona Probate Court Records, Forms, Superior Court Filing Help & eFiling Links

Use official Arizona Judicial Branch, AZCourtHelp, county Superior Court, eFileAZ, and clerk resources to find the correct Arizona probate court, search case records where available, prepare estate paperwork, handle guardianship or conservatorship filings, check local forms, and avoid private record sites that may not reflect current court rules.

🏛️ Superior Court probate divisions 🔎 County-level case search 📂 Estates, guardianships & conservatorships Updated May 2026
★ Official Arizona probate lookup finder
Find the Right State of Arizona Probate Court Path

If you are searching for State of Arizona Probate Court, the first mistake to avoid is assuming there is one statewide “probate court” office for every case. In Arizona, probate matters are generally handled in the Superior Court for the county connected to the estate, protected person, minor, guardianship, conservatorship, or mental health matter.

📍 Find the correct Arizona probate court by county

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Use this for: locating the correct Superior Court probate division or clerk office when you know the county but not the court page.

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Best official source: Arizona Judicial Branch AZ Courts Locator and the county Superior Court probate page.

Before filing: verify the county, filing counter, forms, fees, eFiling availability, and whether original documents must be delivered to the clerk.

⚠️ Official first: Arizona probate filing rules and forms can vary by county. Use statewide forms carefully and check the local court page before filing.
👉 This finder does not search live court records inside this page. It routes you to the right official Arizona source: court locator, county case search, probate forms, guardianship training, eFiling information, or county-specific probate filing instructions.
At a glance

State of Arizona Probate Court Quick Facts Before You Search

The phrase “Arizona Probate Court” is commonly used by the public, but the official structure is county-based. Probate matters are handled through the Superior Court system, usually in the county where the decedent lived, where estate property is located, where the protected person resides, or where the guardianship or conservatorship matter belongs.

The Arizona Judicial Branch probate resources explain that “probate court” is a generic term for the court that hears estate probate, intestate matters, guardianship, conservatorship, elder fraud, physical abuse, and related filings. Arizona also provides statewide generic probate forms, but the state warns that courts may have their own preferred forms. That means the safest workflow is: find the correct county Superior Court, check that county’s probate page, then use statewide or local forms only after confirming the correct filing path.

🏛️ Court type Superior Court County-based probate
📍 Find court AZ Locator Official court finder
📄 Forms AZ Courts Generic statewide forms
💻 eFiling eFileAZ Availability varies
⚖️ Case types Estate + GC Guardianship/conservatorship
⚠️ Important: Probate rules, court forms, local filing instructions, eFiling availability, case lookup access, clerk copy procedures, fees, hearing practices, and original-document requirements can change. Always verify current information with the correct Arizona county Superior Court or Clerk of Superior Court before filing, paying, mailing documents, or relying on a record for legal use.
🔗 Source verification: Official information used in this guide was checked against Arizona Judicial Branch Probate Resources, Arizona Probate Forms, AZ Courts Locator, eFileAZ, eFiling Information, AZCourtHelp forms and probate training resources, and official county probate pages including Maricopa, Pima, Pinal, and Mohave examples. Publish-ready as of May 2026.
Page guide

What This Arizona Probate Court Guide Covers

Official court basics

Official State of Arizona Probate Court Path

Arizona does not operate one single statewide probate counter where every probate case is filed. Probate cases are usually filed in the Superior Court for the appropriate county. The county matters because each county court may have its own probate department page, clerk filing counter, case lookup system, local forms, eFiling rules, fee procedures, hearing process, and copy request process.

Arizona Judicial Branch probate resources provide statewide information and generic forms. AZCourtHelp provides user-friendly forms and resources for self-represented litigants. eFileAZ provides a statewide eFiling system, but actual eFiling availability and permitted filing types can vary by court, county, case type, and document type. Some original documents, such as an original will, may require special handling even when later documents can be filed electronically.

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Find the County First

Use the AZ Courts Locator or the official county Superior Court website before preparing documents. Probate starts with the correct county court, not a random statewide search result.

County-based filing
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Forms Need Local Review

Arizona provides generic probate forms, but courts may have local preferences. Check county instructions before filing estate, guardianship, or conservatorship paperwork.

Avoid rejected filings

Core rules before you search or file

  • Identify the correct Arizona county Superior Court before preparing probate paperwork.
  • Use Arizona Judicial Branch probate resources for statewide guidance and generic forms.
  • Use AZCourtHelp for self-help forms, probate videos, and user-friendly court information.
  • Use the county Superior Court or Clerk of Superior Court page for local filing rules, fees, copies, case access, and hearing details.
  • Do not assume that a statewide generic form is the exact form preferred by every county court.
  • Do not treat a public case lookup result as a certified copy, signed order, letters, or a complete probate file.
Find your county

How to Find the Correct Arizona Probate Court by County

The fastest practical step is to determine the correct county. For decedent estate probate, the county is often tied to where the person lived at death or where property is located. For guardianship or conservatorship, the county may depend on where the adult, minor, or protected person lives. For mental health or protective proceedings, the court and filing path may depend on county-specific procedures.

1

Use the Arizona Judicial Branch court locator

Open the official AZ Courts Locator and look for the Superior Court serving the county connected to your case. If you are unsure, start with the county where the person lived, where property is located, or where the protected person resides.

2

Open the county Superior Court probate page

Once you identify the county, use the county Superior Court or Clerk of Superior Court page for probate-specific filing instructions. County pages often explain forms, fees, eFiling, copy requests, hearings, and case lookup.

3

Confirm the case type before choosing forms

Arizona probate can include informal probate, formal probate, small estate procedures, personal representative matters, guardianships, conservatorships, adult adoptions, and mental health matters. Each path can require different forms and notices.

4

Check local filing and original-document rules

Some counties allow certain probate documents to be filed electronically, while original documents or case-initiating materials may require special handling. Always check local filing instructions before submitting documents.

5

Call the clerk if the case is urgent or unclear

If a deadline, estate asset, guardianship need, conservatorship issue, or hearing is urgent, contact the correct Clerk of Superior Court or probate department before filing the wrong document.

Estate probate help

Arizona Estate, Will, Personal Representative and Small Estate Probate Filing

Arizona probate filings often begin when a person dies and property needs to be transferred, a will must be admitted, a personal representative must be appointed, heirs must be identified, or estate assets need court authority. The correct process depends on the county, estate value, whether a valid will exists, whether there is a dispute, whether assets pass outside probate, and whether a small-estate option applies.

Arizona Judicial Branch and AZCourtHelp resources include probate forms and order forms connected to decedent’s estates and personal representatives. County courts may also provide local packets for informal probate, formal probate, small estate affidavits, probate information forms, appointment of personal representative, order to personal representative, proof of restricted account, and other case-specific documents.

Informal probate

Often used when the matter is more straightforward, the will or heirship situation is not contested, and court involvement may be limited compared with formal proceedings.

Formal probate

Often used when a judge must decide a dispute, confirm a will issue, determine heirs, address objections, or handle more complex estate questions.

Personal representative

The person appointed to administer the estate may need court-issued authority, follow court orders, notify interested persons, handle estate assets, and complete required duties.

Small estate options

Arizona small estate procedures may be available in some situations, but eligibility and waiting periods must be checked carefully with current state and county instructions.

Original will

If there is an original will, confirm with the county clerk how it must be delivered. Do not assume every original document can be uploaded electronically.

Certified copies

Banks, title companies, agencies, and other institutions may require certified court documents rather than a downloaded docket screen.

🧾 Filing reality check: Estate filings can be delayed by using the wrong county, wrong probate type, missing notices, missing original will, incomplete personal representative information, incorrect fee, wrong local form, or failure to follow county-specific filing instructions.
Protected person matters

Arizona Guardianship, Conservatorship, Training and Fiduciary Help

Arizona probate court resources cover more than deceased estates. Probate divisions may handle guardianship, conservatorship, elder fraud, physical abuse, and related protective matters. These cases can affect personal rights, healthcare, housing, finances, property management, and court-supervised fiduciary duties.

AZCourtHelp provides probate training videos in English and Spanish for probate, guardianship, and conservatorship topics. Arizona court resources also provide forms and guidance related to orders, fiduciary duties, restricted accounts, conservator responsibilities, and court reporting. Because these cases can affect liberty and property rights, users should avoid treating them like simple form-filling exercises.

Adult guardianship

Use this path when an adult may need help with personal decisions, care, housing, or medical decisions due to incapacity or other legal grounds.

Minor guardianship

Use this path when a child may need a court-appointed guardian. County-specific forms and notice requirements matter.

Conservatorship

Use this path when money, property, restricted accounts, inventories, budgets, or financial protection require court oversight.

Training videos

Use AZCourtHelp probate training videos when a county or case type requires training or when you need to understand basic fiduciary responsibilities.

Fiduciary duties

Guardians, conservators, and personal representatives may have duties to report, account, preserve property, notify interested persons, and follow court orders.

Legal help warning

Get legal help when family conflict, incapacity, abuse, contested assets, mental health, or fiduciary liability is involved.

⚠️ High-stakes warning: Guardianship and conservatorship can affect rights, money, housing, healthcare, and personal freedom. If the matter is contested, urgent, or involves abuse or large assets, do not rely only on a general internet article.
Avoid portal confusion

Arizona Probate Court vs County Superior Court, AZCourtHelp, eFileAZ and Private Record Sites

Arizona probate users often mix up several different systems. The Arizona Judicial Branch provides statewide probate resources and generic forms. AZCourtHelp provides self-help resources and form links. Each county Superior Court handles local probate filings. eFileAZ is a statewide eFiling system, but availability and permitted document types can vary. Private record sites may show partial, old, or paid-report information and should not be treated as official court records.

State probate resources

Correct path: Arizona Judicial Branch probate page for statewide probate information and generic forms.

OFFICIAL LINK: Open AZ Probate Resources
Court locator

Correct path: AZ Courts Locator to find the right court by county or court type.

OFFICIAL LINK: Open Court Locator
Self-help forms

Correct path: AZCourtHelp for user-friendly Arizona forms, probate forms, and training videos.

OFFICIAL LINK: Open AZCourtHelp
Electronic filing

Correct path: eFileAZ and county eFiling information after confirming that your probate document can be filed electronically.

OFFICIAL LINK: Open eFileAZ
⚠️ Portal warning: Do not pay a private “Arizona probate records” website before checking official Arizona Judicial Branch, AZCourtHelp, county Superior Court, and Clerk of Superior Court resources.
Free vs paid records

Free Arizona Probate Court Search vs Paid Copies, Filing Fees and Certified Records

Many official Arizona probate resources can be accessed for free online, including statewide probate information, AZ Courts Locator, AZCourtHelp forms, and some county case information. But probate work can still involve official fees. Filing fees, copy fees, certified copies, service fees, publication fees, eFiling service costs, training or fiduciary compliance steps, and certified letters may require payment.

The key is to pay the right office for the right thing. A private search fee does not create a court filing. A paid background report is not a certified court order. A downloaded public case page is not letters of personal representative. For legal use, banks, title companies, agencies, and other courts may require certified documents from the Clerk of Superior Court.

Free first step

Use official Arizona Judicial Branch, AZCourtHelp, and county court resources before paying private search sites.

Filing fees

Probate filing fees are normally handled by the county clerk or court. Check the local county fee schedule before filing.

Fee waiver or deferral

Arizona court resources include fee waiver and deferral information for users who cannot afford court costs.

Certified copies

Certified probate documents must be requested from the proper clerk office and may require a fee.

eFiling costs

Electronic filing may involve court fees or provider processes. Confirm local eFiling instructions before submission.

Private reports

Private probate-record or people-search reports may be incomplete and are not substitutes for official court records.

Forms and filing help

Arizona Probate Forms, Fee Waiver, Local Forms and eFiling

Arizona Judicial Branch provides generic probate forms that may be accepted statewide, but it clearly warns that each court may have its own preferred forms. This is the detail many users miss. If you download a statewide form but the county expects a local packet, local cover sheet, county-specific instruction page, or clerk process, your filing may be delayed.

AZCourtHelp also provides forms for probate orders and procedures, including decedent estate forms, personal representative forms, and related probate resources. eFileAZ is the Arizona Judicial Branch statewide eFiling system. However, whether probate filings can be filed electronically depends on the county and the type of filing. Some counties allow certain probate eFiling; some filings, original wills, or case-initiating documents may require extra steps.

State probate forms

Use Arizona Judicial Branch probate forms for generic statewide documents, but check county preferences before filing.

AZCourtHelp forms

Use AZCourtHelp for user-friendly Arizona forms and topic pages for self-represented users.

Fee waiver or deferral

If you cannot afford filing fees, review Arizona fee waiver and deferral resources before deciding not to file.

County packets

Some counties publish probate packets or local form kits. Use those when the local court directs you to them.

eFileAZ

Use eFileAZ only after confirming that the county and document type allow electronic filing.

Original documents

Ask the clerk how to handle original wills, original bonds, certified documents, and other items that may not be handled like normal PDFs.

Official forms

📄 Arizona Probate Forms

Statewide generic probate forms from the Arizona Judicial Branch. Check local court preferences before filing.

Open Probate Forms
Official eFiling

💻 eFileAZ

Arizona Judicial Branch statewide eFiling system. Availability depends on court and filing type.

Open eFileAZ
Official self-help

🎓 Probate Training Videos

AZCourtHelp probate, guardianship, and conservatorship videos available for public guidance.

Open Probate Videos
County examples

Arizona County Probate Court Examples: Maricopa, Pima, Pinal and Mohave

Because Arizona probate is county-based, users should look at the county court that fits the case. The following examples show how different county resources can look. These are not the only Arizona probate courts; they are examples of official county-level probate paths.

Maricopa County

Maricopa County Superior Court has a Probate and Mental Health Department covering decedents’ estates, guardianships, conservatorships, adult adoptions, and mental health matters. Maricopa also provides public access to probate case information and clerk probate filing resources.

Open Maricopa Probate
Pima County

Pima County Superior Court has a Probate Court page and lists a Probate Clerk’s Office at 110 West Congress Street, 1st Floor, Tucson, Arizona 85701, with probate contact resources.

Open Pima Probate
Pinal County

Pinal County Superior Court has a Probate Court page for probate, guardianship, and conservatorship topics, and the Clerk of Superior Court provides eFiling information through eFileAZ and AZTurboCourt.

Open Pinal Probate
Mohave County

Mohave County Judicial Branch probate resources explain that Superior Court has jurisdiction over distribution of a person’s estate after death and provides probate forms and kits.

Open Mohave Probate
⚠️ County warning: Do not copy a Maricopa, Pima, Pinal, or Mohave instruction into another county filing without checking the correct county court. Probate packets, filing counters, fees, and eFiling rules can differ.
Map and locator

Arizona Probate Court Near Me Map and County Court Finder

For a statewide Arizona probate topic, the safest map is a general court-search map plus the official AZ Courts Locator. Do not rely on the nearest courthouse alone. Probate must be filed in the correct county and case type, not simply the building closest to you.

Search Arizona Superior Court Probate Near You

Use this map for general directions only: confirm the correct county and probate filing office through the official court locator before filing.

Most searched questions

State of Arizona Probate Court FAQs

Is there one State of Arizona Probate Court?

No. The public often says “Arizona Probate Court,” but probate matters are generally handled by the Superior Court in the proper Arizona county. Start with the AZ Courts Locator and the county Superior Court probate page.

Which Arizona court handles probate cases?

Arizona probate cases are usually handled in Superior Court. The correct county depends on the case type, decedent, estate property, protected person, ward, or guardianship/conservatorship issue.

Where can I find Arizona probate forms?

Use the Arizona Judicial Branch Probate Forms page and AZCourtHelp forms. The state forms are generic and may be accepted statewide, but courts may have their own preferred forms, so check the county court page before filing.

Can I search Arizona probate records online?

Sometimes, but probate case search is often county-based. Start with the correct county Superior Court or Clerk of Superior Court search page. Maricopa County, for example, provides public access to probate case information.

Can I eFile Arizona probate documents?

Arizona has eFileAZ, but probate eFiling availability depends on the county, case type, and document type. Some filings or original documents may need special handling. Confirm local instructions before filing electronically.

What does Arizona probate court handle?

Arizona probate divisions can handle decedent estates, intestate matters, wills, personal representatives, guardianships, conservatorships, fiduciary issues, elder fraud or abuse-related matters, and some mental health or protected-person matters depending on the county.

How do I know which county to file probate in Arizona?

Start with the county connected to the decedent, estate property, protected person, minor, or guardianship/conservatorship matter. If unsure, use the AZ Courts Locator and call the county Clerk of Superior Court before filing.

Are Arizona probate forms free?

Many official Arizona probate forms and self-help resources are available free online. Filing the case, requesting copies, obtaining certified documents, or serving papers may still involve official fees.

Can I get a fee waiver for Arizona probate court?

Arizona court resources include fee waiver and deferral information. If you cannot afford filing costs, review the official fee waiver and deferral resources and ask the proper county clerk about local requirements.

Why can’t I find an Arizona probate case online?

The case may be in another county, indexed under a different name, recently filed, restricted, sealed, older than online coverage, or not available through the search system you used. Verify the county and contact the proper Clerk of Superior Court when the result matters.

Final summary

Best Way to Use Arizona Probate Court Records and Filing Resources

The best path is simple: find the correct Arizona county Superior Court first, use the Arizona Judicial Branch probate resources for statewide guidance, use AZCourtHelp for self-help forms and training, then verify forms, filing fees, eFiling, copies, and hearing instructions with the local county court or Clerk of Superior Court.

For filing, do not guess. Arizona probate can involve estate administration, will probate, informal probate, formal probate, small estate procedures, guardianship, conservatorship, fiduciary duties, training, mental health proceedings, certified records, and original documents. The biggest mistakes are using the wrong county, using a private record site, filing a generic form without checking local requirements, assuming eFiling is always available, and treating a public case result as a certified court document.

Important Notice: This article is an independent informational guide and is not the Arizona Judicial Branch, AZCourtHelp, eFileAZ, any Arizona Superior Court, any Arizona Clerk of Superior Court, a court office, or a law firm. Probate laws, court rules, county forms, filing fees, eFiling availability, document access, copy procedures, case search availability, hearing instructions, and local court requirements can change. Always verify urgent or official matters directly with the correct Arizona county Superior Court, Clerk of Superior Court, or a qualified Arizona probate attorney before acting.

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