Franklin County Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law: A Guide for Rental Property Owners in Ozark, Charleston, and Arkansas’s Wine Country
Franklin County sits in the Arkansas River Valley between the Boston Mountains to the north and the Ouachita foothills to the south, and the Arkansas River itself cuts through the middle of it — literally and administratively. Because crossing the river was a genuine hardship in the 1890s, the state legislature established a second county seat at Charleston for citizens in the southern settlements. That dual courthouse arrangement, born of geography and practicality, persists today. Both the Ozark and Charleston courthouses are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The county also claims a notable footnote in American civil rights history: Charleston was the first town in the former Confederacy to integrate its public schools, in 1954, and that act was later recognized as a National Commemorative Site.
The Critical Filing Rule: North of the River or South?
Before anything else, Franklin County landlords need to know which courthouse handles their property. The Arkansas River divides the county into northern and southern districts. Properties north of the river fall under the Ozark courthouse at 211 W. Commercial St., Ozark, AR 72949, (479) 667-3818. Properties south of the river fall under the Charleston courthouse at 607 E. Main St., Charleston, AR 72933, (479) 965-7332. Both locations are served by Circuit Clerk Janice King under the 5th Judicial Circuit. Filing an eviction at the wrong courthouse creates delay. When in doubt, call the Ozark office first and confirm which district covers your specific property address.
Butterball and the Poultry Economy
Poultry production and processing accounts for most of Franklin County’s industrial employment. Butterball’s turkey processing plant in Ozark is the county’s largest private-sector employer, and the surrounding mountains support numerous contract poultry grow-out operations. Butterball plant workers are hourly W-2 employees with stable employment at a major national brand — good tenant profiles when properly screened. Qualify on base hourly wage rather than overtime-inflated totals; overtime at food processing plants can be significant during peak production periods but is not contractually guaranteed. The food processing workforce in Ozark includes Spanish-speaking workers; ensure your screening criteria are applied identically to all applicants regardless of national origin in full compliance with federal fair housing law.
Contract poultry growers who raise flocks for integrators under grow-out contracts are a different profile: self-employed farm operators paid per flock cycle on a schedule that can be irregular. Request two years of personal tax returns (Form 1040 with Schedule F) and evaluate annualized net farm income after the costs of financing chicken houses, utilities, and production expenses. The gross payment per cycle can look substantial; what matters is the net after operating costs.
Altus: Arkansas’s Wine Country
The Swiss-German immigrants who settled Franklin County’s mountains in the late 1800s recognized that the mountain tops were suited for wine grapes, and the winemaking tradition they established has grown into a genuine regional industry. Altus is now recognized as the winemaking capital of Arkansas, home to nationally ranked wineries including Wiederkehr Winery (whose original underground cellar built in 1880 by John A. Wiederkehr is on the National Register of Historic Places), Post Familie Winery, Mount Bethel Winery, and Chateau Aux Arc Vineyards. The Post and Wiederkehr wineries are consistently ranked among the top 100 in the United States by annual production.
The annual Altus Grape Festival and the Wiederkehr Weinfest draw thousands of visitors to the county each year and create concentrated short-term lodging demand that STR operators can capture. Winery workers, restaurant staff, and hospitality employees associated with the Altus wine industry have variable income that peaks around harvest and festivals. For these applicants, request prior-year tax returns rather than relying on recent pay stubs from peak season. Properties on or near the Altus Mountain ridge, with mountain views, vineyard proximity, or access to the Boston Mountains scenery, are particularly well-suited for the wine tourism short-term rental market.
The Mulberry River and Outdoor Recreation
The Mulberry River, approximately 20 minutes from Ozark, is one of Arkansas’s premier canoe and kayak rivers. Fast-moving, clear, and flowing through scenic Boston Mountain terrain, the Mulberry attracts paddlers from across the region and is particularly popular in spring and early summer when water levels support Class II–III rapids. The river also provides excellent smallmouth bass fishing. Properties with river access, proximity to popular put-in and take-out points, or access to hiking in the surrounding national forest land can support strong short-term rental demand from outdoor recreation visitors. Verify any STR permit requirements with the relevant municipality before listing.
The Fort Smith and Russellville Commuter Corridor
Ozark is approximately 30 minutes from Fort Smith and 30 minutes from Russellville, making Franklin County a practical bedroom community for workers in both metro areas. Fort Smith’s major employers include Rheem, Trane, Georgia-Pacific, ArcBest, Mercy Fort Smith, and Baptist Health-Fort Smith. Russellville’s key employers include Arkansas Tech University and Arkansas Nuclear One (ANO) — nuclear plant workers are among the highest-compensated industrial workers in the state and are particularly favorable tenant profiles. Franklin County’s lower housing costs attract these workers. Verify employment at the actual out-of-county employer directly.
Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law in Franklin County
All Arkansas landlord-tenant law applies statewide with no local modifications in Franklin County. The governing statutes are A.C.A. §§ 18-16-101 through 18-16-108 and the Arkansas Residential Landlord-Tenant Act of 2007, A.C.A. §§ 18-17-101 et seq. Security deposits are capped at two months’ rent and must be returned within 60 days (applies to landlords with 6+ units). No habitability warranty by default; no repair-and-deduct. Abandoned property may be disposed of immediately on lease termination. No rent control anywhere in Arkansas.
All evictions are filed in the 5th Judicial Circuit under Circuit Clerk Janice King — at 211 W. Commercial St., Ozark (479-667-3818) for north district properties, or 607 E. Main St., Charleston (479-965-7332) for south district properties. Mailing address: P.O. Box 1112, Ozark, AR 72949. Filing fee: $165. Self-help evictions are prohibited.
This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Arkansas landlord-tenant law is governed by the Arkansas Code Annotated and applies statewide, with no local rent control or just-cause eviction requirements in Franklin County. Consult a licensed Arkansas attorney or contact the 5th Judicial Circuit Court Clerk at (479) 667-3818 (Ozark) or (479) 965-7332 (Charleston) for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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