Done in about 15 minutes

Write your Arizona will: Simple. Fast.

Tell us a little about your family and your property, and we build your personalized Arizona will draft for you. Available right away as a PDF, a Word file and an OpenOffice file.

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Will Generator: Simple. In 15 minutes.

164 wills created in the last 30 days

Personal information

Basic information about you

Email address

Where should we send your will draft?

Family and relatives

Information about your family

If you have no spouse and no children, Arizona's intestacy rules (A.R.S. Title 14) may pass your estate to your parents by default. Naming your beneficiaries in the will lets you decide instead.

Assets and estate

Information about your assets

Estate distribution and final wishes

Naming beneficiaries, gifts and last wishes

Arizona has no forced heirship and no spousal elective share. Your spouse is protected instead through community property, so if you are married, remember that you can only give away your own share of community property. Within that, you are free to name one main beneficiary.

Without alternate beneficiaries, a gift can fail or pass under Arizona's intestacy rules if a beneficiary dies before you do.

A specific gift passes a particular item or dollar amount to a named person, separately from the rest of your estate.

In Arizona you may leave out an adult child or other relative. A spouse cannot be cut out of their own community property share, but there is no spousal elective share to worry about. Naming the person clearly and stating that the omission is intentional avoids confusion.

This is the person you name to carry out the instructions in your will. In Arizona this role is called the personal representative, often known simply as the executor.

Personal details

Details needed for the legal validity of your will

Here's how easy it is

1
10 minutes

Answer the questions

Simple questions about your assets, heirs and special wishes. Everything is optional, nothing has to be filled in.

2
5 minutes

Personal details

Name and personal information. Placeholders or initials are perfectly fine.

3
Instantly

Get your will

Personalized draft will as PDF, Word and OpenOffice. Available to download right away.

ArizonaLast Will: Personalized. Legally sound. Instant.

Family together
Personalized

Tailored to your personal situation

No copying templates off the internet. Our system creates an individual draft will based on your life situation: marital status, assets and your wishes.

  • Takes your family situation into account
  • Protect your partner, children and relatives individually
  • No one-size-fits-all will
Professional consultation
Legally sound

Faster, more affordable and more private than a lawyer

A lawyer often costs several hundred dollars and takes weeks. Our system knows the fundamentals of succession law and creates your draft in just a few minutes, for a fraction of the cost. Completely private, with no in-person appointment.

  • Aligned with the fundamentals of succession law
  • Reflects Arizona will requirements and community property
  • 100% private, no appointment, no waiting
A will on a desk
Download instantly

A finished draft in under 15 minutes

Answer a few simple questions and get your personalized draft will to download right away as PDF, Word and OpenOffice. Accessible again at any time.

  • Available instantly as PDF, Word and OpenOffice
  • Editable and re-downloadable at any time
  • Ready in under 15 minutes

Why ArizonaLast Will is better than ChatGPT

ArizonaLast Will

  • Built around Arizona succession law
  • Trained on professionally drafted wills
  • Guides you step by step through the process
  • A finished draft in 10 minutes
  • Guide to copying it out by hand
  • As PDF, Word and OpenOffice

ChatGPT

  • No legal specialization
  • Not trained on wills
  • No structured guidance
  • Lots of fixes needed
  • No handwriting guide
  • Text only

Frequently asked questions

The document you generate is a ready-to-use draft, not a will that is already in force. Under A.R.S. Section 14-2503, Arizona recognizes a holographic will as valid when the signature and the material provisions are in your own handwriting. That means you take the draft and copy the substantive parts out by hand, then sign it. Once you have done that, no witnesses and no notary are required for it to be legally effective.

Arizona law treats a handwritten (holographic) will differently from a typed one. A printed document that you simply sign would need witnesses to be valid. A holographic will skips the witness requirement, but only because the key provisions are in your own handwriting, which is what proves the document is genuinely yours. So the handwriting is not busywork: it is the exact thing that makes the will valid without witnesses in Arizona.

Arizona is a community property state, which changes how this works. Your spouse already owns one half of the community property you built during the marriage, and that half is theirs regardless of what your will says. Beyond that, Arizona has no spousal elective share: unlike most states, it does not let a surviving spouse claim a fixed percentage of your estate, because community property is treated as the protection instead. You can generally disinherit an adult child, but to avoid an accidental omission being challenged you should name the child clearly and state your intention. A short, deliberate sentence is far safer than silence.

Keep the signed original somewhere safe and tell the person you named as personal representative where it is, since only the original can be probated. A fireproof box or safe at home works, as does a bank safe deposit box (be aware access can be delayed after death). Arizona also lets you deposit your will with the clerk of the superior court for safekeeping during your lifetime under A.R.S. Section 14-2515. There is no statewide will registry in Arizona, so make sure at least one trusted person knows the location.

We strongly recommend against a single joint document. Each spouse should make a separate will. The clean way to do this is mirror wills: two individual holographic wills with matching terms, for example each leaving everything to the other and then to the children. Because a holographic will must be in the testator's own handwriting, one shared sheet cannot be in both of your handwritings at once. Separate wills also let either of you update your own will later without tangling the other's.

Yes. A will only takes effect at death, so you can revise it any time while you are alive and of sound mind. The simplest and safest route is to handwrite a fresh holographic will that states it revokes all prior wills, then sign and date it. Avoid crossing things out or writing notes in the margins of an existing will, since that invites confusion and disputes. After a major life change such as a marriage, divorce, or a new grandchild, it is worth making a new one.

No, and we do not pretend it does. This service helps you produce a clear, well-structured draft for a straightforward Arizona estate. If your situation is more involved, for example a blended family, a business, property in more than one state, a special needs beneficiary, or a likely dispute among heirs, you should have an Arizona estate planning attorney review your plan. Think of this as a solid starting point, not legal advice.

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Structured around A.R.S. Section 14-2503

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Current Arizona law

This is not legal advice. Arizona Last Will is not a law firm and does not provide legal representation. This service prepares a self-help will draft as a starting point. To become a valid holographic will in Arizona, the document must be copied out and signed in your own handwriting, since Arizona Revised Statutes Sec. 14-2503 requires the signature and the material provisions to be in the testator's own hand. For a large or complicated estate, consider talking to a licensed Arizona attorney.