Solution processing of metal-oxide semiconductors has received significant attention in various fields of electronics owing to its advantages such as simple fabrication process, large-area scalability, and facile stoichiometric tunability. However, the conventional sol-gel route requires a relatively long annealing time to obtain a low-defect film with high density and sufficient amount of metal-oxygen-metal bonding state, which prevents implementation in cost-effective continuous manufacturing. Here, we report rapid formation of solution-processed oxide semiconductors by employing a dual-fuel-based solution combustion synthesis route. In particular, by optimizing the ratio of dual fuels of acetylacetone and 1,1,1-trifluoro-acetylacetone (molar ratio of 7:3), high-performance indium-gallium-zinc oxide (IGZO) thin-film transistors (TFTs) could be fabricated at 350 degrees C with the annealing time as short as 5 min (In:Ga:Zn = 0.68:0.1:0.22). Based on spectroscopic analysis, it was found that the dual fuels enabled rapid formation of the metal-oxygen-metal lattice structure with low defective oxygen bonding states. The IGZO TFTs fabricated with an optimized fuel ratio exhibited average field-effect mobilities of 1.11 and 3.69 cm(2) V-1 s(-1) with annealing times of 5 and 20 min, respectively (averaged in 9 similar to 12 devices). Also, in the case of the 5 min annealed device, the threshold voltage was -0.48 +/- 1.96 V, showing enhancement-mode operation. Furthermore, the device showed good stability against both positive gate bias stress and negative gate bias stress conditions with small threshold voltage shifts of -1.28 and - 1.28 V in 5760 s, respectively.