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Arizona Bankruptcy Exemptions: What's Protected in 2026

A complete, plain-English guide to Arizona's bankruptcy exemptions in 2026. What you get to keep — your home, car, retirement, household goods, and more — broken down by category.

One of the biggest myths about bankruptcy is that you lose everything. In Arizona, that couldn’t be further from the truth.

Arizona has some of the most generous bankruptcy exemptions in the country. Exemptions are legal protections that let you keep essential property — your home, your car, your retirement, your household goods — while still discharging your debts.

In this guide, I’ll walk you through every major Arizona bankruptcy exemption as of 2026, what it covers, and how it works in practice.

What Is an Exemption?

When you file bankruptcy, your “bankruptcy estate” technically includes all your property. The bankruptcy trustee’s job is to identify any assets that aren’t protected by exemptions and sell them to pay creditors.

Exemptions are the legal shield around your property. If it’s exempt, the trustee can’t touch it. You keep it. End of story.

Arizona has opted out of the federal bankruptcy exemption scheme, which means Arizonans must use Arizona state law exemptions, found primarily in A.R.S. Title 33, Chapter 8.

The Big Ones

Homestead Exemption — Up to $400,000

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1101

The homestead exemption protects up to $400,000 of equity in your primary residence. This applies to a house, condo, mobile home, or even a cooperative apartment — as long as it’s your primary residence.

Key points:

  • It’s equity that’s protected, not the value of the home. Your equity is the value minus any mortgages and liens.
  • Only applies to your primary residence, not vacation homes or investment properties.
  • The exemption is per person, but does not double for married couples in Arizona — both spouses share one $400,000 exemption on the marital home.

Motor Vehicle Exemption — Up to $15,000

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1125(8)

Arizona protects up to $15,000 of equity in one motor vehicle. If you have a disability and use the vehicle as transportation, the exemption increases to $25,000.

Key points:

  • Covers equity, same concept as with homes.
  • You can only exempt one vehicle per person, but married couples can each exempt their own vehicle.
  • If you’re underwater on a car loan (owe more than it’s worth), you have zero equity, and exemption limits don’t even come into play.

Household Furnishings and Goods — Up to $15,000

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1123

Your everyday household items are protected up to $15,000 total. This covers furniture, appliances, kitchenware, linens, art, and similar items.

In practice, this exemption covers almost everyone’s household goods completely. The trustee values household items at garage sale / used fair market value, not what you paid for them or what it would cost to replace them. A $3,000 couch you paid full price for might be valued at $200-$400 in the used market.

Retirement and Benefits

Retirement Accounts — Fully Exempt

Statutes: A.R.S. § 33-1126(B), 11 U.S.C. § 522

Virtually all qualified retirement accounts are 100% protected in Arizona bankruptcy:

  • 401(k), 403(b), and similar employer-sponsored plans
  • Traditional and Roth IRAs (up to federal cap, currently over $1.5 million)
  • Pensions
  • Profit-sharing plans
  • Annuities (to the extent held in qualified retirement vehicles)

This is a huge one. Many clients are shocked to learn that decades of retirement savings are fully safe in bankruptcy.

Social Security, Unemployment, and Veterans’ Benefits

These federal benefits are fully protected from creditors and in bankruptcy. If the funds are in a dedicated account and can be traced back to those sources, they are exempt.

Life Insurance — Cash Surrender Value

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1126(A)(6)

Cash surrender value of life insurance is exempt up to $20,000 (if the beneficiary is a spouse or child).

Personal Property Categories

Tools of the Trade — Up to $5,000

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1130

Tools, equipment, instruments, and books used in your trade or business are protected up to $5,000.

Clothing — Up to $500

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1125(1)

Your wearing apparel is exempt up to $500. This is intentionally narrow — it’s not meant to cover luxury wardrobes, but rather the basics.

Books, Musical Instruments, and Heirlooms

  • Books: Up to $250
  • Musical instruments: Up to $400
  • Family portraits, heirlooms, photos: Up to $500

Pets, Livestock, and Working Animals

Domestic pets, poultry, and certain livestock have protections. There’s also a specific exemption for up to $1,000 in pet food and supplies.

Firearms — Up to $2,000

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1125(7)

Firearms are protected up to $2,000 total.

Bank Accounts — Up to $300

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1126(A)(9)

A single bank account (checking or savings) is exempt up to $300, or $600 for a joint account.

This is one of Arizona’s weaker exemptions, and it’s why careful pre-bankruptcy planning matters. Timing your filing around when you have low cash balances — right after paying rent, for instance — can make a significant difference.

Wages — 75% Protected

Statute: A.R.S. § 33-1131

75% of your disposable earnings are exempt from garnishment in Arizona, meaning creditors can only reach 25%. This is relevant not just in bankruptcy but in debt collection lawsuits generally.

Less Common But Important

Federal Tax Refunds (EITC Portion)

The Earned Income Tax Credit portion of a federal tax refund is exempt in Arizona. This protects a significant amount of money for working families who rely on the EITC.

Prepaid Tuition (529) Plans

Funds in a qualified prepaid tuition program or 529 college savings plan are exempt — with some limits for contributions made shortly before filing.

Alimony and Child Support

Alimony, maintenance, and child support necessary for your support (and your dependents’) are exempt.

Personal Injury Settlements

Compensation for personal injury is exempt up to $150,000 per person (A.R.S. § 33-1126(A)(3)).

What’s NOT Exempt?

Some property categories have no exemption in Arizona, or very limited ones:

  • Cash and bank balances beyond the $300 limit
  • Investment accounts (non-retirement brokerage accounts)
  • Real estate other than your primary home (rental property, vacation homes, raw land)
  • Expensive jewelry beyond a narrow exemption
  • Collectibles, boats, ATVs, RVs, and recreational equipment — though these sometimes fit within other categories

If you have substantial non-exempt assets, Chapter 13 bankruptcy (rather than Chapter 7) often makes more sense. In Chapter 13, you keep everything and pay creditors an amount equal to what they would have received in a Chapter 7 asset liquidation — usually spread across a 3-5 year repayment plan.

Pre-Bankruptcy Planning: Where the Real Work Happens

Here’s the part most people miss: how you structure your assets in the months before filing can dramatically change what you keep.

Legal pre-bankruptcy planning includes:

  • Paying down non-exempt debt before filing
  • Timing filings around known deposits or expected tax refunds
  • Converting non-exempt assets into exempt forms (within legal limits)
  • Spending down cash on legitimate living expenses before filing

Warning: This is legal planning. It’s not hiding assets, transferring property to relatives, or lying on the schedules. Those are crimes. Real pre-bankruptcy planning is about understanding the exemption rules and using them the way the law intends.

This is one of the biggest places where having an experienced Arizona bankruptcy attorney pays for itself many times over.

The Most Important Point

The fear of “losing everything” in bankruptcy is the single biggest reason people stay trapped in unmanageable debt. In my 20+ years of practice, I’ve rarely seen a Chapter 7 case where my client lost property they actually cared about. Between Arizona’s generous homestead, vehicle, and retirement exemptions, most clients keep everything.

If you’re not sure whether your assets are protected, don’t guess. Talk to an attorney who actually knows Arizona’s exemption rules inside and out.

For more on Arizona exemptions and bankruptcy strategy, check out:

Next Steps

  1. Inventory your assets — write down everything you own and its approximate current market value. This is the starting point for any exemption analysis.
  2. Schedule a free consultation — we’ll go through your assets together, apply the Arizona exemptions, and tell you exactly what would be protected and what wouldn’t.
  3. Don’t panic — most people keep far more than they expect. The system is designed to let honest debtors get a fresh start.

Note: Arizona exemption amounts are periodically updated by the legislature. The figures above are accurate as of 2026. Always consult with an Arizona bankruptcy attorney about the exemption amounts that apply to your specific case.

Watch the Related Video
Arizona Bankruptcy Exemptions: What's Protected in 2026 — related video by John Skiba

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