Educational guide — not legal advice. Property and probate law varies by state and changes over time. Consult a licensed Arizona attorney about your situation.
The short answer
Both tools keep your home out of probate in Arizona. The difference is scope and cost:
- A beneficiary deed (Arizona’s transfer-on-death deed) is a narrow, cheap tool: it passes one property to named beneficiaries at death. That’s it.
- A living trust is a broad, more expensive tool: it can hold your home and accounts and manage them if you’re incapacitated, all privately.
Because Arizona probate is already inexpensive and the beneficiary deed is simple to use, a beneficiary deed is often all an Arizona homeowner needs. A trust is worth its cost when you have complexity a simple deed can’t handle.
What each one is
Beneficiary deed (A.R.S. §33-405)
Arizona’s version of a transfer-on-death deed. You record a deed naming a beneficiary who automatically receives your real estate when you die — no probate for that property. Key features:
- You keep full ownership and control while alive. You can sell, mortgage, or change your mind.
- It’s revocable anytime before death.
- The beneficiary has no rights and no access until you die.
- It must be signed, notarized, and recorded with the county recorder before death to be valid.
Living trust
A revocable living trust is a legal container you transfer assets into. You control it while alive (you’re your own trustee), and your successor trustee distributes the assets at death without probate. It can hold real estate, bank and brokerage accounts, and more — and it keeps working if you become incapacitated.
Side-by-side comparison
| Factor | Beneficiary deed | Living trust |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | ~$15–$150 (recording + optional prep) | $1,500–$4,000 (attorney) |
| What it covers | One piece of real estate | Real estate, accounts, most assets |
| Avoids probate? | Yes, for that property | Yes, for funded assets |
| Helps if you’re incapacitated? | No | Yes |
| Privacy | The deed is a public record | Private |
| Out-of-state property | No (Arizona only) | Yes |
| Controlled / delayed distributions | No — outright transfer | Yes (good for minors, special needs) |
| Ongoing upkeep | None | Must keep assets titled in the trust |
| Revocable? | Yes | Yes |
When a beneficiary deed is enough in Arizona
For many Arizona homeowners, the beneficiary deed is the sweet spot. It’s a good fit if:
- Your main goal is passing your home to one or more people without probate.
- Your other assets already pass outside probate — retirement accounts and life insurance with named beneficiaries, payable-on-death bank accounts.
- Your beneficiaries are adults who can receive the property outright.
- Your situation is straightforward — no incapacity-planning needs, no out-of-state property.
Because Arizona probate is cheap and its small-estate limits are generous ($200,000 personal property / $300,000 home equity), the beneficiary deed often closes the only real gap (the house) for almost nothing. Pair it with a will and beneficiary designations and you have a complete, low-cost plan. See Do You Need a Living Trust in Arizona if You Have a Will?.
When a living trust is worth it
Step up to a trust when:
- You want incapacity protection — a trust lets your successor trustee manage assets if you can’t, avoiding a court conservatorship. A beneficiary deed does nothing here. (A durable power of attorney also helps and is cheaper.)
- You own property in more than one state — a trust avoids a second probate; an Arizona beneficiary deed only covers Arizona property.
- You want privacy beyond a single deed, or you’re consolidating many assets.
- You need controlled distributions — holding assets for minor children or a special-needs beneficiary, releasing them over time. A beneficiary deed transfers outright, which can be a problem for minors or beneficiaries on benefits.
- You have a blended family or competing interests to balance.
Watch-outs with a beneficiary deed
A few honest cautions:
- Multiple beneficiaries can get messy. If you name several people, they become co-owners and must agree on selling or managing the property. That can create friction a trust would have structured.
- It doesn’t handle incapacity. If you become unable to manage your affairs before death, the beneficiary deed offers nothing.
- Beneficiary problems. If a beneficiary dies before you, or has creditor or divorce issues, the outright transfer can create complications. Consider naming alternates.
- Record it. A beneficiary deed that’s signed but never recorded with the county recorder before death is ineffective. Don’t leave it in a drawer.
- It doesn’t avoid debts or Medicaid recovery. The property can still be reached for the deceased’s obligations.
A common Arizona combination
Many Arizona families land on this low-cost stack:
- A will (names guardians, a personal representative, and catches everything else).
- Beneficiary designations on retirement accounts and life insurance.
- Payable-on-death registrations on bank and brokerage accounts.
- A beneficiary deed on the home.
That keeps most assets out of probate without the cost of a trust — and works well precisely because Arizona probate is cheap for whatever’s left.
The honest takeaway
In Arizona, a beneficiary deed is a cheap, effective way to pass your home outside probate, and for many homeowners it’s all they need — especially since Arizona probate is already inexpensive and its small-estate limits are high. Reach for a living trust when you need more than a single-property transfer: incapacity planning, out-of-state property, privacy across many assets, or controlled distributions. Match the tool to the complexity, and don’t pay trust prices for a job a recorded deed can do.
Common questions
Is a beneficiary deed the same as a transfer-on-death deed?
Yes — “beneficiary deed” is Arizona’s name for a transfer-on-death deed (A.R.S. §33-405). It passes real estate to a named beneficiary at death, outside probate.
How much does a beneficiary deed cost in Arizona?
Very little — typically a county recording fee (often $15–$50), plus optional attorney or form-prep costs. It must be notarized and recorded before death.
Is a beneficiary deed better than a living trust in Arizona?
For passing a single home to adult beneficiaries, usually yes — it’s far cheaper, and Arizona probate is already inexpensive. For incapacity planning, out-of-state property, or controlled distributions, a trust is better.
Does a beneficiary deed avoid Arizona estate tax?
There’s nothing to avoid — Arizona has no estate or inheritance tax. A beneficiary deed avoids probate, not taxes.
Can I name more than one beneficiary on an Arizona beneficiary deed?
Yes, but think it through. Multiple beneficiaries become co-owners who must then agree on selling or managing the property, which can cause friction. Naming an alternate in case a beneficiary dies before you is wise. If you need more control than a simple co-ownership, a trust handles it better.
Does a beneficiary deed override my will?
Yes — like other non-probate transfers, a recorded beneficiary deed controls that property regardless of what your will says. Make sure the two are consistent so your home doesn’t get promised to different people in different documents.
Related reading
- Do You Need a Living Trust in Arizona if You Have a Will?
- How Much Does an Estate Plan Cost in Arizona?
- Estate Planning in Arizona: The Complete Guide
- Transfer on Death Deed vs. Living Trust in Texas (compare)
- Will vs. Trust: Which Do You Need?
Educational information only — not legal advice. Arizona property and probate law is set by statute and changes; confirm your situation with a licensed Arizona attorney. Sources: A.R.S. §§33-405, 14-3971; Arizona Revised Statutes Title 14.