Non-Marital Cohabitation Living Together Agreement - Arizona 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Non-Marital Cohabitation Living Together Agreement in the editor.
  2. Begin by reviewing the introductory section, which outlines the agreement's purpose and the parties involved. Ensure that both parties' names and addresses are correctly filled in.
  3. Proceed to Section 1, where you will specify previously owned property. Clearly list any property that is considered separate for each party.
  4. In Section 2, address debts incurred before and after cohabitation. Select the appropriate options regarding responsibility for these debts.
  5. Continue through Sections 3 to 12, filling in details about wills, health insurance, expenses, and other relevant agreements as applicable.
  6. Once all sections are completed, review the document thoroughly to ensure accuracy. Save your changes frequently.
  7. Finally, utilize our platform’s signing feature to securely sign the document electronically once both parties are satisfied with its contents.

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Cohabitation can be an alternative to marriage in situations where marriage is not possible for legal or religious reasons (such as same-sex, interracial or interreligious marriages). Cohabitation, sometimes called de facto marriage, is becoming a more common substitute for conventional marriage.
Cohabitation is common among couples who prefer not to marry. However, Arizona law does not grant automatic rights to unmarried partners, regardless of how long they have lived together. Property rights can become complicated, especially when one partner claims ownership of assets acquired during the relationship.
When unmarried couples separate, they generally keep the property they individually own. However, jointly owned assets, like a house or a bank account, are typically split. Disputes often arise regarding assets if one partner contributed docHubly more or if there was an informal agreement to share ownership.
You can either follow the legal procedures that apply in your statetypically this means the court will order the property to be sold, and the net proceeds (after paying mortgages, liens, and costs of sale) to be dividedor you can docHub your own compromise settlement.
Because unmarried cohabitation does not create a marital estate in Arizona, community property principles do not apply when unmarried couples separate. Instead, all property acquired by either party before or during the relationship is considered separate property belonging solely to the person who acquired it.
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