Arizona Lien Waiver Forms — Generate in 60 Seconds
Generate Arizona-compliant lien waivers that follow the mandatory statutory forms prescribed by A.R.S. Section 33-1008. All four waiver types available with free preview. Arizona requires substantial compliance with the statutory language — use the wrong form and it has no legal effect.
Which Type Do You Need?
Arizona uses the standard 4-type framework. Two factors determine which form you need: (1) whether payment has cleared, and (2) whether this covers a progress payment or the final payment. Arizona's unconditional forms include a bold notice warning that the document is enforceable even if you haven't been paid — take that seriously.
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Sign Up FreeArizona Lien Waiver Rules at a Glance
Mandatory statutory forms
A.R.S. 33-1008 prescribes four forms. Non-compliant waivers are unenforceable — no estoppel, no exceptions.
No notarization required
Arizona's statutory forms do not include a notary block and the statute does not require notarization.
Preliminary 20-day notice required
Subs and suppliers must serve notice within 20 days of first furnishing work (A.R.S. 33-992.01). Without it, no lien rights.
Bold notice on unconditional forms
Unconditional waivers carry a statutory warning: the document is enforceable even if you haven't been paid. Must be in type at least as large as the largest on the document.
No fixed retainage cap (private)
A.R.S. 32-1129.01 requires a 'reasonable amount.' At project end, owner retainage limited to 150% of punch-list items.
120-day lien filing deadline
120 days after completion, or 60 days if the owner records a notice of completion (A.R.S. 33-993).
Arizona Lien Waiver Legal Requirements
Arizona is a mandatory statutory form state. A.R.S. Section 33-1008 prescribes four waiver forms in subsection D. Per subsection A, an owner or contractor may not waive or impair the claims or liens of other persons except by written consent or as prescribed by Section 33-1003. Per subsection B, no oral or written statement purporting to waive a claim is enforceable unless it follows the statutory forms or the claimant actually received payment in full. Substantial compliance with the prescribed forms is required — the waiver must be signed by the claimant or authorized agent, and conditional releases require evidence of payment. Arizona's unconditional forms include a mandatory notice in type "at least as large as the largest type otherwise on the document" warning that the document is enforceable even without payment.
Arizona Conditional Progress Waiver
Statutory reference: A.R.S. 33-1008(D)(1)
What It Is
Waives lien rights for a progress payment, effective only when the check clears the bank.
When to Use
When exchanging a waiver for a progress payment you haven't received yet, or when you have a check in hand that hasn't cleared.
Key Legal Points
- Effective only upon claimant receiving payment and the check being "properly endorsed and paid by the bank on which it is drawn."
- Covers only the progress payment amount — does not waive rights for retainage, unpaid extras, or disputed claims.
- Must substantially follow the statutory form to be enforceable.
- Requires: project description, job location, owner name, payer (maker of check), amount, and payee.
- The claimant warrants that they will use the funds to pay their laborers, subcontractors, and suppliers.
Tips
- This is the most commonly used Arizona waiver — most subs exchange it with progress payment requests.
- The conditional nature protects you: if the check bounces, your lien rights survive.
- Keep copies of all submitted waivers and the corresponding payment records.
Arizona Unconditional Progress Waiver
Statutory reference: A.R.S. 33-1008(D)(2)
What It Is
Immediately waives lien rights for a progress payment upon signing. Includes the bold statutory warning notice.
When to Use
Only after you've received the progress payment in good and sufficient funds.
Key Legal Points
- "This document waives rights unconditionally and states that you have been paid for giving up those rights. This document is enforceable against you if you sign it, even if you have not been paid."
- Warning notice must be in type at least as large as the largest type otherwise on the document.
- Effective immediately upon signing — no waiting for check to clear.
- Same scope as conditional progress: covers only the progress payment, not retainage or extras.
Warning
The statutory notice means exactly what it says. If you sign before payment clears and the check bounces, you have waived your lien rights for that payment. Use a conditional form until payment is confirmed.
Tips
- Only sign after you've confirmed payment has cleared your bank account.
- The bold warning is on the form for a reason — point to it if a GC pressures you to sign early.
Arizona Conditional Final Waiver
Statutory reference: A.R.S. 33-1008(D)(3)
What It Is
Waives lien rights for ALL labor, services, equipment, and materials on the entire project, conditioned on receipt of final payment.
When to Use
When submitting a request for the final payment (including retainage) and you haven't received it yet.
Key Legal Points
- Covers the entire project — not just a progress payment period.
- Conditional on check clearing the bank, same as the conditional progress form.
- The claimant warrants they will use the funds to pay all laborers, subs, and suppliers on the project.
- Final payment amount should include all retainage and resolved change orders.
- Must substantially comply with the statutory form in A.R.S. 33-1008(D)(3).
Tips
- Make sure the final payment amount includes all retainage. Arizona doesn't have a fixed retainage cap, so verify the exact amount held.
- If change orders are still disputed, list them separately as exceptions before signing.
Arizona Unconditional Final Waiver
Statutory reference: A.R.S. 33-1008(D)(4)
What It Is
States the claimant has been paid in full. Immediately and irrevocably releases all lien rights on the project. Includes the bold statutory warning.
When to Use
Only after ALL payment — including final payment and retainage — has been received in good and sufficient funds.
Key Legal Points
- Same bold warning notice as the unconditional progress form.
- "Paid in full" for all labor, services, equipment, and materials on the entire project.
- The claimant warrants payment to all subs and suppliers.
- No exceptions or carve-outs — this is a complete release.
- Most consequential Arizona waiver form.
Warning
Do not sign with any amounts outstanding — including retainage, disputed change orders, or back charges. Once signed, this release is permanent. The statutory warning on the form is your last line of defense.
Tips
- This is the final, complete release. Verify every dollar before signing.
- If disputes remain, use a conditional final instead and resolve them separately.
- Keep a signed copy for your records — you may need it for future audits or disputes.
Common Arizona Lien Waiver Mistakes
- 1
Skipping the preliminary 20-day notice
Arizona requires subs and suppliers to serve a preliminary 20-day notice within 20 days of first furnishing work (A.R.S. 33-992.01). Without it, you have no lien rights — and a lien waiver for rights you don't have is meaningless. This catches out-of-state contractors working in Arizona for the first time.
- 2
Signing an unconditional waiver before payment clears
The bold statutory warning on unconditional forms is clear: the document is enforceable even if you haven't been paid. If a GC hands you an unconditional form with the check, use a conditional form until the check clears.
- 3
Using a generic or out-of-state template
Arizona requires substantial compliance with the statutory forms in A.R.S. 33-1008. A generic template or one from another state is unenforceable under subsection B. This is the most common reason waivers fail in Arizona.
- 4
Not including all retainage in the final payment amount
Arizona has no fixed private retainage cap — the withheld amount varies by contract. Before signing a final waiver, confirm the exact retainage balance and make sure the final payment figure covers it. At project end, owner retainage is limited to 150% of punch-list items under A.R.S. 32-1129.01.
- 5
Confusing the lien filing deadline when a notice of completion is recorded
The default is 120 days after completion. But if the owner records a notice of completion, the deadline drops to 60 days. Owners sometimes record this strategically to shorten your window. Watch for it.
Arizona Lien Waiver FAQ
Does Arizona require statutory lien waiver forms?
Do lien waivers need to be notarized in Arizona?
What's the difference between a conditional and unconditional lien waiver in Arizona?
What is Arizona's preliminary 20-day notice?
What is Arizona's deadline to file a mechanics lien?
Are advance lien waivers enforceable in Arizona?
What are Arizona's retainage rules?
Is an Arizona lien waiver the same as a lien release?
What if I don't use the Arizona statutory form?
Can an owner record a notice of completion to shorten my lien deadline?
Lien Waiver Guides & Resources
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LienWaiver.pro now syncs lien waivers directly with QuickBooks Online. Generate waivers from QBO bills, track them, and attach signed PDFs back to the bill.
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Conditional vs Unconditional Lien Waiver: Which One Should You Sign?
Sign conditional waivers before payment clears, unconditional after. Here's the difference and why it matters.
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How to Fill Out a Lien Waiver Form: A Step-by-Step Guide
A lien waiver has 8-12 fields. Here's what goes in each one, common mistakes that invalidate waivers, and how to avoid signing away more than you should.
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Do Lien Waivers Need to Be Notarized? A State-by-State Guide
Only 2 states require notarized lien waivers by law. In California, notarization may actually invalidate your waiver. Here's what you need to know.
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Lien Waiver Forms for Other States
* = mandatory statutory form language required