Arizona receiver bonds.
We size, underwrite & quote it.

A court-appointed receiver takes control of property the court is protecting.
The bond guarantees you’ll discharge your duties faithfully and account for the assets.
The court sets the amount to the value in receivership — and we underwrite it.
A surety specialist reviews your file and returns a quote, usually within one business day.

Required of a receiver under Ariz. R. Civ. P. 66(b) and the court’s order of appointment
Amount is set by the court to the value of the assets in receivership
Underwritten on the receiver’s file; collateral may apply to a large estate
Underwrittencourt sets the amountA-ratedA.M. Best carriers1 business daytypical specialist reply
Trusted by industry leaders
NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
JLL
Triple Five
Georgetown
NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
JLL
Triple Five
Georgetown
How it works

Built for the order of appointment.

The order appointing a receiver usually sets the bond, and the receiver can’t fully act until it’s filed. Here is the whole process:

TODAY · 10 MINUTES

Send us the file

Apply online with the order of appointment, the assets in receivership and their value, and the receiver’s details. The value of the estate drives the penal sum.

WITHIN 1 BUSINESS DAY

A surety specialist underwrites it

A specialist reviews the order, the receiver’s credit and finances, and any collateral, then returns a quote. The amount is fixed by the court — underwriting decides approval and collateral.

ON APPROVAL

Execute & file

Once you bind, we issue the executed bond on the court’s required form with the power of attorney attached, ready to file with the clerk so the receiver can take control of the assets.

About this bond

What it is and who needs it.

What a receiver bond secures

A court appoints a receiver (or master or referee) to take custody of disputed or distressed property — a business, real estate, or assets — and manage it neutrally while a case proceeds.

The receiver bond guarantees the receiver faithfully discharges those duties: collects, preserves, accounts for, and distributes the assets as the court directs. If the receiver mismanages or misappropriates, the bond makes the estate whole, and the surety looks to the receiver to repay it.

Because the surety stands behind the whole estate, the bond is underwritten on the receiver’s credit and finances, and a large receivership can require collateral. The court sets the amount in its discretion — often a multiple of monthly gross rents for rent-producing property — and we’ll flag what applies.

Arizona RuleAriz. R. Civ. P. 66(b) provides that a person appointed receiver must file with the clerk a bond, with surety approved by the court, in an amount the court fixes, conditioned that the receiver will faithfully discharge the duties of receiver. If the court appoints a receiver without notice, it must require and the applicant must file a bond in an amount the court fixes.

You need this bond if you’re

A court-appointed receiver taking control of a business, real estate, or assets in litigation
A general or special master (master or referee) directed to hold or manage property
A receiver in a commercial or distressed-asset receivership ordered by the superior court
Counsel arranging the bond so the receiver can file it and take possession under the order of appointment

The application takes about ten minutes.

These are the actual underwriting fields — the order of appointment, the assets and their value, the receiver, and your finances. Submit once and a surety specialist returns a quote, typically within one business day. Free until your bond is issued.

Start the application →
FAQs

Common questions.

If yours isn't here, the bond team can usually answer within the hour.

What is an Arizona receiver bond? +
It is the bond a court-appointed receiver, master, or referee files to guarantee faithful discharge of the receiver’s duties over the property in receivership. Under Ariz. R. Civ. P. 66(b), the receiver must file a bond with surety approved by the court, in an amount the court fixes.
How much does it cost? +
It is underwritten, not flat-rated. The court sets the penal sum to the value of the assets in receivership, in its discretion. A surety specialist then reviews the receiver’s credit and finances and any collateral and returns a premium quote, usually within one business day.
Who sets the bond amount? +
The appointing court does, sizing it to the assets the receiver will control. For rent-producing property the bond is often set at a multiple of monthly gross rents. We size and underwrite the bond to whatever amount the order of appointment specifies.
When must the bond be filed? +
On appointment. Rule 66(b) requires the receiver to file the bond before taking up the duties of receiver, and if the court appoints a receiver without notice it must also require the applicant to file a bond. We help structure whichever the court orders.
How fast can the bond be issued? +
A specialist typically returns a quote within one business day of a complete application. Once you bind and any collateral is in place, the executed bond issues on the court’s form, ready to file so the receiver can take possession.
Related bonds

Other New York bonds.

Get bonded and take control of the receivership.

Send us the order of appointment and the asset value, and a surety specialist sizes, underwrites, and quotes the bond — typically within one business day. Free until your bond is issued.

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