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Coconino County, Arizona · A.R.S. §§ 13-907, 13-908

Restore Civil Rights in Coconino County, AZ

Coconino County residents with felony convictions may need to restore their civil rights — the right to vote, serve on a jury, and hold public office. As of HB2119 (effective September 24, 2022), first-time AZ felons get automatic restoration at probation discharge under § 13-907. Repeat offenders, out-of-state convictions, and pre-2022 cases require an application under § 13-908.

Check eligibility → Call (480) 923-7570
Arizona civil rights restoration eligibility flowchart A decision tree showing how civil rights are restored after an Arizona felony conviction. First-time felons have automatic restoration under HB2119 (effective Sept 24, 2022). Repeat offenders or out-of-state convictions require an application under § 13-908. Civil Rights Restoration (§§ 13-907 / 13-908) Arizona Revised Statutes — vote, jury, hold public office Felony conviction Conviction in Arizona? vs. another state or federal court NO → § 13-908(B) Apply in your AZ county of residence discretionary YES ↓ First Arizona felony conviction? No prior felony from any state restitution must be paid in full NO → § 13-908(A) Apply in convicting county; no waiting discretionary YES ↓ Probation / sentence discharged? Discharge order from court or ADOC State v. Begay (2026) — end of probation NO → WAIT Until discharge YES ↓ AUTO-RESTORED Civil rights restored automatically § 13-907 (HB2119, eff. Sept 24, 2022) What's restored • Right to vote • Right to serve on jury • Right to hold public office Not included: Firearm rights — separate process under § 13-910 Auto-issuance: May 2026 — courts file a Certificate of Restoration

Filing in Coconino County

Where to file

Coconino County Superior Court

200 N. San Francisco St., Flagstaff, AZ 86001

Phone: (928) 679-7600
Hours: 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM, Monday – Friday

E-filing

Coconino County implemented mandatory eFiling for attorneys in criminal cases on January 1, 2021. Self-represented filers may continue to file paper documents in person or via the AZ statewide eFileAZ / AZTurboCourt platforms.

Payment methods

Cash, money orders, cashier's checks, credit cards, and online payments via azcourtpay.com or coconinoclerkpayments.com.

Court filing fee for this service is $0.

Prosecutor service

Coconino County Attorney's Office

110 E. Cherry Ave., Flagstaff, AZ 86001

Phone: (928) 679-8200

After-hours filing

In-person and mail filings only. Coconino does not operate exterior depository boxes.

Cities covered

Flagstaff, Page, Williams, Sedona (partial), Tuba City

All Coconino County cities file at the same Superior Court.

The statute, in plain terms

Section 13-907 (HB2119) automatically restores civil rights for first-time AZ felons at probation discharge — no application needed. Section 13-908 covers everyone else: repeat offenders apply in the convicting court; out-of-state and federal convictions apply in the AZ county of residence. State v. Begay (2026) confirmed that the end of probation is the trigger date.

Coconino County Restore Civil Rights FAQ

Where do Coconino County residents file a restore civil rights petition?

Petitions are filed with the Coconino County Superior Court. The primary filing location is 200 N. San Francisco St., Flagstaff, AZ 86001. Hours are 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM, Monday – Friday.

What is the court filing fee for this in Coconino County?

$0. Arizona courts charge no filing fee for record-relief petitions, including those filed in Coconino County. The legislature deliberately removed filing fees to make these remedies accessible to all qualified petitioners.

Can I e-file in Coconino County?

Coconino County implemented mandatory eFiling for attorneys in criminal cases on January 1, 2021. Self-represented filers may continue to file paper documents in person or via the AZ statewide eFileAZ / AZTurboCourt platforms.

How long does this process take in Coconino County?

Coconino County processing times are typically 60-120 days for uncontested petitions. The court has a smaller criminal-bench docket than Maricopa or Pima, which usually keeps wait times shorter.

What happens if the prosecutor objects?

Coconino County Attorney's Office reviews petitions and may object within the statutory window (typically 30-60 days depending on the relief type). If they object, the court schedules a hearing. Most properly-prepared petitions in Coconino County are decided on the papers without a hearing — objections are uncommon when the petitioner clearly meets statutory eligibility. The prosecutor's office can be reached at (928) 679-8200.

Which cities does this cover in Coconino County?

Petitions filed at the Coconino County Superior Court cover felonies committed anywhere in Coconino County, including Flagstaff, Page, Williams, Sedona (partial), Tuba City. Coconino County Superior Court has jurisdiction over felonies committed anywhere in the county. The county covers a vast geographic area — about 18,600 square miles — including most of the Grand Canyon region and parts of the Navajo Nation.

Ready to restore civil rights in Coconino County?

Free 3-minute screening tells you whether you qualify under A.R.S. §§ 13-907, 13-908.

Check eligibility →