Arizona Quitclaim Deed (Individual Grantor by Attorney-in-Fact)
County Specific Legal Forms Validated as recently as July 9, 2026 by our Forms Development Team
About the Arizona Quitclaim Deed (Individual Grantor by Attorney-in-Fact)
How to Use This Form
- Select your county from the list on the left
- Download the county-specific form
- Fill in the required information
- Have the document notarized if required
- Record with your county recorder's office
What Others Like You Are Saying
"Very clear and complete. Good value."
"Very useful and easy to use. Great value too. Especially liked the example."
"perfect. follow examples. no problem at court house. good deed layout."
"Needed a deed and the form provided with example and guide were of the most help. Thank you"
"Very easy to find what I was looking for and the cost was reasonable. The documents saved me a lot o…"
One person's interest leaves the record under another person's signature on this Arizona quitclaim deed. The grantor is the principal named in the granting clause; the hand at the bottom belongs to an agent, an attorney-in-fact signing under a written power of attorney. Arizona builds room for that arrangement into its basic conveyance rule: A.R.S. Section 33-401(A) lets an estate in real property pass by an instrument subscribed and delivered by the disposing party or by that party's agent thereunto authorized by writing.
Authority the Record Can Trace
The deed keeps the agency on its face. Section 2 identifies the agent, states the date of the power of attorney, and carries an optional recording reference for a power placed of record. The operative section then recites that the agent executes solely in the representative capacity, under a written power within the meaning of A.R.S. Sections 33-401(A) and 14-5501, with no actual knowledge of revocation, termination, or the principal's death. Behind those recitals, Section 14-5504 protects acts taken in good faith without knowledge of the principal's death, and Section 14-5505 makes an agent's affidavit of nonrevocation recordable alongside a recordable instrument. Arizona never adopted the Uniform Power of Attorney Act, so the agent's authority, including any authority to convey for no consideration, lives in the wording of the power itself.
A Certificate Written for a Representative Signer
The notary block departs from the individual short form. Following A.R.S. Section 41-265, the certificate states that the record was acknowledged before the notary by the agent as agent (attorney-in-fact) of the named principal. The conveyance itself is the familiar statutory quitclaim: the grantor quit claims all right, title, and interest, with no words of warranty following. A notarization on or after September 12, 2026 also collects the signer's thumbprint in the notary journal, a rule Arizona's 2026 anti-fraud act applies to deeds and to powers of attorney alike.
The Configuration This Deed Carries
One grantor block names the principal; one agent block identifies the power of attorney; grantee and vesting, consideration, legal description, exemption notation, and source of title follow in numbered sections; a single signature line and one representative-capacity certificate close the execution. An out-of-state owner whose Arizona agent releases an inherited fractional interest to the co-heir occupying the parcel, and a principal in long-term care whose agent clears a stale interest of record, present the pattern this deed recites. The completed example works the first pattern through a Mesa parcel in Maricopa County, entered for no monetary consideration and noting exemption code A4 on the line the form positions under the property description.
Where the Neighboring Forms Begin
A principal signing personally is the Arizona Quitclaim Deed (Individual Grantor). Spouses conveying community real property together are the Arizona Quitclaim Deed (Joint and Community Property Grantors), and a record owner whose non-owner spouse signs a release is the Arizona Quitclaim Deed (Married Grantor with Non-Owner Spouse Joinder). A fiduciary conveying under a trust, with the Section 33-404 beneficiary disclosure, is the Arizona Quitclaim Deed (Trustee Grantor).
The package pairs the fillable blank deed with a completed Maricopa County example and a plain language guide covering each numbered section, the Section 14-5501 power of attorney formalities, and recording. The materials are informational and are not legal advice.
How to Use This Form
- Select your county from the list above
- Download the county-specific form
- Fill in the required information
- Have the document notarized if required
- Record with your county recorder's office
What Others Like You Are Saying
"Very clear and complete. Good value."
"Very useful and easy to use. Great value too. Especially liked the example."
"perfect. follow examples. no problem at court house. good deed layout."
"Needed a deed and the form provided with example and guide were of the most help. Thank you"
"Very easy to find what I was looking for and the cost was reasonable. The documents saved me a lot o…"
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Important: County-Specific Forms
Our quitclaim deed (individual grantor by attorney-in-fact) forms are specifically formatted for each county in Arizona.
After selecting your county, you'll receive forms that meet all local recording requirements, ensuring your documents will be accepted without delays or rejection fees.