Navajo County Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) Form
Last validated July 8, 2026 by our Forms Development Team
Navajo County Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) Form
Fill in the blank Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) form formatted to comply with all Arizona recording and content requirements.

Navajo County Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) Guide
Line by line guide explaining every blank on the Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) form.

Navajo County Completed Example of the Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) Document
Example of a properly completed Arizona Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) document for reference.
All 3 documents above included • One-time purchase • No recurring fees
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Additional Arizona and Navajo County documents included at no extra charge:
Where to Record Your Documents
Recorder's Office
Holbrook, Arizona 86025
Hours: Monday thru Friday 8:00 am until 4:30 pm
Phone: 928-524-4194
Recording Tips for Navajo County:
- Ensure all signatures are in blue or black ink
- Ask if they accept credit cards - many offices are cash/check only
- Recorded documents become public record - avoid including SSNs
- Bring extra funds - fees can vary by document type and page count
- Both spouses typically need to sign if property is jointly owned
Cities and Jurisdictions in Navajo County
Properties in any of these areas use Navajo County forms:
- Blue Gap
- Cibecue
- Clay Springs
- Fort Apache
- Heber
- Holbrook
- Hotevilla
- Indian Wells
- Joseph City
- Kayenta
- Keams Canyon
- Kykotsmovi Village
- Lakeside
- Overgaard
- Pinedale
- Pinetop
- Pinon
- Polacca
- Second Mesa
- Shonto
- Show Low
- Snowflake
- Sun Valley
- Taylor
- White Mountain Lake
- Whiteriver
- Winslow
- Woodruff
Hours, fees, requirements, and more for Navajo County
How do I get my forms?
Forms are available for immediate download after payment. The Navajo County forms will be in your account ready to download to your computer. An account is created for you during checkout if you don't have one. Forms are NOT emailed.
Are these forms guaranteed to be recordable in Navajo County?
Yes. Our form blanks are guaranteed to meet or exceed the applicable formatting requirements used for recording in Navajo County, including margin requirements, font requirements, and other layout standards. This guarantee applies to formatting, not to the legal sufficiency of information entered by the user or the suitability of a form for a particular transaction.
Can I reuse these forms?
Yes. You can reuse the forms for your personal use. For example, if you have multiple properties in Navajo County you only need to order once.
What do I need to use these forms?
The forms are PDFs that you fill out on your computer. You'll need Adobe Reader (free software that most computers already have). You do NOT enter your property information online - you download the blank forms and complete them privately on your own computer.
Are there any recurring fees?
No. This is a one-time purchase. Nothing to cancel, no memberships, no recurring fees.
How much does it cost to record in Navajo County?
Recording fees in Navajo County vary. Contact the recorder's office at 928-524-4194 for current fees.
Questions answered? Let's get started!
The grantor who signs this Arizona quitclaim deed gives the property away and keeps living in it. The form conveys the parcel to the grantee with Arizona's statutory quitclaim words under Section 33-402(1) and reserves a life estate in the same operative clause: the grantee takes a vested remainder the day the deed is delivered, and the grantor keeps the exclusive right to occupy the property, use it, and collect its rents and income for life.
Keeping a life estate, giving the remainder
A reserved life estate splits one title into two present interests. The life estate stays with the grantor, who remains the person in possession. The remainder passes to the grantee now, as real property the grantee already owns while waiting for possession. When the life tenant dies, the life estate simply expires, and the grantee holds the whole title without probate of the interest that passed under the deed and without any new conveyance. Arizona statute separately recognizes a revocable instrument under Section 33-405 that conveys nothing until death; a life estate deed takes the opposite path. The transfer is present and binding, so after delivery the grantor alone cannot revoke the deed, name a different taker, or sell or mortgage the fee free of the remainder. That permanence is the trade written on the face of the deed: the power to change course is given up for the certainty that the property's destination is fixed while lifetime possession stays put.
What the reservation clause carries
The conveyance and the reservation travel in one operative section. The form quit claims all of the grantor's right, title, and interest to the grantee, reserves the life estate for the life of the grantor, or for the joint lives of two grantors and the survivor of them, and states expressly that no covenant or warranty of title and no power of revocation attach. Around that clause the form recites one or two grantors, who are also the life tenants; a grantee section with its own vesting line for the remainder; and two signature blocks, each with a separate acknowledgment certificate, so spouses conveying community real property can both join as A.R.S. Section 25-214(C) requires, before different notaries or on different dates where distance calls for it. The form is not set up as a grant of a life estate to a third person, and it reserves no power to sell or revoke without the grantee; the reservation runs to the signers themselves. An owner passing the remainder in a family residence to an adult child while keeping lifetime occupancy, and a widowed owner fixing where a home goes while continuing to live in it, present the pattern this deed recites.
Through the recorder's door with code B3
A life estate reservation changes none of Arizona's recording arithmetic. The flat thirty dollar fee of Section 11-475 covers the deed, the two dollar transfer fee of Section 11-1132 rides inside it, and the Affidavit of Property Value checkpoint of Section 11-1133 still stands at the counter. The family transfers this configuration usually documents tend to be exempt from the affidavit: Section 11-1134(B)(3) reaches a transfer of residential property between family members for only nominal actual consideration, and the notation goes on the face of the deed beneath the legal description. The completed example carries that entry, A.R.S. 11-1134 B3, for a Mesa home whose widowed owner deeds the remainder to her daughter and keeps possession for life. Acknowledgments taken on or after September 12, 2026 also gain a new journal entry, the signer's thumbprint, required by Arizona's 2026 anti-fraud act.
The download includes the blank deed as a fillable PDF, the completed Maricopa County example, and a section by section guide covering the reservation clause, the remainder vesting options, signing, and recording. The materials are informational and are not legal advice.
Important: Your property must be located in Navajo County to use these forms. Documents should be recorded at the office below.
This Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) meets all recording requirements specific to Navajo County.
Our Promise
The documents you receive here are guaranteed to meet or exceed the applicable Navajo County recording format requirements. If there is a rejection caused by our formatting, we will correct the issue or refund your payment. This guarantee applies to document formatting only and does not extend to information entered by the user, the selection of the form, or the legal effect of the completed document.
Save Time and Money
Get your Navajo County Quitclaim Deed (Reserving Life Estate) form done right the first time with Deeds.com Uniform Conveyancing Blanks. At Deeds.com, we understand that your time and money are valuable resources, and we don't want you to face a penalty fee or rejection imposed by a county recorder for submitting nonstandard documents. We constantly review and update our forms to meet rapidly changing state and county recording requirements for roughly 3,500 counties and local jurisdictions.
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December 19th, 2023
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September 17th, 2020
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ed c.
May 24th, 2022
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April 1st, 2026
I was very impressed on what I needed to get the Deed I requested. Everything was there and I got it all printed out with no problems.
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March 2nd, 2023
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Cleatous S.
December 9th, 2020
The deed form is hard to fill in. There is no way to fill in the county in the "reviewed by" section. Also, there is no place for the Grantee's address on the form. I had to include it in the fill-in space for the legal description.
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Steven B.
April 18th, 2026
County accepted the TODD form. Easy to understand and don’t have to hire an attorney! Excellent
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March 7th, 2020
Well worth the $20.00 for the Transfer on Death Deed, if you are willing to do the leg work to notarize and record the deed. Money well spent and money well saved. The value is in the short, bullet type instructions and State specific forms and requirements.
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October 28th, 2021
Using www.deeds.com was super ez even for a non-technical person like me, it saved me lots of time and the instructions and communications were great,I was able to file my deed online in half a day with most of that time taken up by the jurisdiction I filed with processing my submittal. I will use it again!
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October 25th, 2021
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September 15th, 2019
A great way to access form knowledge
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David S.
October 20th, 2020
I downloaded the quit claim deed form and saved it on my computer. I opened it with Adobe and filled it out. The space for the legal description was too small (2 lines only) which did not allow enough room for the long property description that I had.
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July 19th, 2020
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July 26th, 2019
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