Izard County Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law: Trout Fishing, Retirement Communities, and the Ozark Hills — A Landlord’s Guide to Melbourne and the White River Country
There is a painting hanging in the Izard County Courthouse in Melbourne, Arkansas, that has been there for the better part of a century. It announces, in plain and unambiguous terms, that a five-dollar fine awaits anyone who spits on the floor — no exceptions. It is a small detail, but it captures something essential about this county: a place that takes its standards seriously, values directness, and doesn’t particularly care whether those standards conform to what anyone else is doing. Izard County, nestled in the southern Ozark Mountains of north-central Arkansas, operates on its own terms, at its own pace, and for its own purposes — purposes that in the twenty-first century revolve around three intersecting economies: a state prison that became the county’s largest employer, a retirement population anchored by one of Arkansas’s most unusual planned communities, and a world-class trout fishery that draws anglers from across the country every month of the year. Landlords operating in this market need to understand all three.
The Courthouse, the History, and the Wood-Burning Furnace
Izard County was formed in 1825 from parts of Independence County, making it one of the original counties of the Arkansas Territory. It was named for George Izard, a War of 1812 general who served as the second governor of the Arkansas Territory. The county’s early history is remarkable for its connections to the broader story of American western expansion: the first county clerk was John Houston, brother of Sam Houston who would later lead Texas to independence. In December 1838, approximately 1,200 Cherokee people traveled across Izard County on the Jacksonport Military Road on what became known as the Benge Route of the Trail of Tears — one of the documented paths of that forced migration across Arkansas. The county’s courthouse has burned twice, losing all records each time.
The current courthouse, built from 1938 to 1940 under the National Youth Administration (a New Deal program), is a two-story Art Deco limestone structure on the National Register of Historic Places. It holds one distinction that no other courthouse in the United States can claim: it is partly heated by a wood-burning furnace, a concession to the realities of rural Ozark construction economics in the late 1930s. The county clerk’s office is situated entirely inside a vault — a design choice that reflects the painful memory of two previous courthouses burning down and taking all county records with them. The vault door is still unlocked by combination dial. And the original painting warning of the five-dollar spitting fine still hangs in the courthouse today, a quiet monument to the directness of a different era.
The North Central Unit: The County’s Largest Employer
In 1990, the Arkansas Department of Corrections opened the North Central Unit north of Calico Rock, at 10 Prison Circle off Highway 9. The facility has grown to a capacity of 800 prisoners and has, since its opening, become the single largest employer in Izard County. For a county of 13,577 people, a correctional facility of this scale has an outsized employment impact — not just for corrections officers but for the full range of support positions that any facility of this size requires: medical staff, mental health professionals, food service workers, maintenance personnel, administrative and records staff, and transportation employees.
For landlords, state corrections employees are among the most reliably screenable tenant profiles available in any rural Arkansas market. They are state employees with fixed pay grades established by the Arkansas Department of Corrections compensation schedule, W-2 income that is fully documented, and employment stability significantly higher than most private-sector positions. Corrections officer positions in Arkansas require specific certifications and ongoing training that create professional accountability and reduce casual turnover. To screen a North Central Unit employee, verify employment directly with the Arkansas Department of Corrections, confirm the position classification and pay grade, and review recent pay stubs. Long-tenured officers approaching retirement may also be drawing on substantial accrued leave and pension expectations that are worth understanding when evaluating a longer-term lease commitment.
Horseshoe Bend: Screening Retirees in a Planned Community
Horseshoe Bend is one of the more unusual real estate environments in rural Arkansas. Founded in 1960 as a planned retirement and resort community along the Strawberry River, it has grown into the largest community in Izard County — surpassing Melbourne, the county seat — with its own distinctive amenities: seven private lakes, a golf course, a health spa, tennis facilities, a shopping center, and a small general aviation airport. The community was designed from the ground up to attract retirees and seasonal residents seeking Ozark scenery, outdoor recreation, and a self-contained community infrastructure without the costs and complexity of a larger city.
Since the 1970s, Izard County has seen a steady influx of retirees relocating from other states and from urban Arkansas, drawn by the low cost of living, the natural beauty, and the specific amenities of Horseshoe Bend. This retiree population is a significant segment of the Izard County rental market, particularly for properties in and around Horseshoe Bend and along the Strawberry River corridor. Screening retiree applicants requires a different documentation approach than screening W-2 employees. Retirees typically have no paycheck income; their financial picture is composed of Social Security benefits (documented by the annual Social Security award letter or benefit verification letter), pension distributions (documented by pension benefit statements or 1099-R forms), retirement account distributions (IRA or 401k statements showing regular distributions), and potentially investment income from brokerage accounts. Do not disqualify applicants solely because they lack employment income. Request the full picture: Social Security letter, pension statement, account distributions, and any supplemental income documentation, then evaluate the total monthly income against the qualifying threshold.
Many Horseshoe Bend retirees are former professionals — teachers, government employees, military retirees, small business owners — with pension income and Social Security that comfortably covers local rent levels. The Horseshoe Bend HOA structure and community rules also provide an additional layer of accountability for landlords with properties inside the community; verify any HOA rental restrictions or approval requirements before leasing HOA-governed properties.
White River Trout Fishing and the Tourism Economy
The White River below the Norfork and Bull Shoals dams is one of the most celebrated trout fisheries in the United States, and it forms Izard County’s southwestern border. The cold water released from the depths of these Ozark impoundments — far colder than the natural river temperature — creates the ideal conditions for rainbow and brown trout that have made the White River famous among anglers from across North America and internationally. Unlike many fishing destinations where peak season is concentrated into a few summer months, the White River’s tailwater trout fishery is year-round, generating a consistent flow of visitors through every season. This has made Calico Rock — the quaint bluff-top town overlooking the White River — and the surrounding river corridor a meaningful STR market for fishing lodges, cabin rentals, and private vacation homes with river access or proximity.
For landlords, the STR opportunity in Izard County is real and worth understanding. Properties with White River access, river views, or convenient proximity to boat launches and guide services command significant STR premiums over comparable inland properties. The fishing tourism market also generates some demand for longer-term seasonal rentals from fishing guides and outfitters who base their operations in the area. River-access properties should be assessed for STR potential before being defaulted to long-term rental use, and any STR operation should be verified against local municipal permit requirements before listing.
The broader tourism workforce — guide services, fishing lodges, cabin rental operations, outfitters, and hospitality businesses — represents a segment of the local rental market with income characteristics that differ from the corrections and retirement tenant profiles. Tourism workers, particularly those in guide services and seasonal hospitality, may earn significant income during peak periods but have lower guaranteed base income during slower months. For tenants primarily employed in the tourism economy, evaluate annual income using prior-year tax returns rather than a single busy-season pay stub, and consider whether the income is structured as W-2 employment or self-employment (Schedule C).
Calico Rock, Ozark Scenery, and the Small-County Rental Dynamic
Calico Rock, perched on limestone bluffs above the White River, is one of the most visually striking small towns in Arkansas. Its name comes from the multicolored limestone and chert bluffs along the river that early settlers described as resembling calico cloth. The town serves as a gateway community for White River fishing access and draws visitors for its scenic setting, the Calico Rock Museum, and its position near some of the best trout water in the county. It is also home to the North Central Unit at its northern edge, creating an unusual juxtaposition of natural beauty, tourism, and industrial-scale corrections employment.
In a county this small — 13,577 people across 577 square miles of Ozark hill country — the rental market operates differently than in larger urban or suburban communities. Word of mouth carries significant weight; the tenant pool is limited; and a reputation for fair, professional landlord practice is itself a competitive advantage in attracting and retaining the kind of stable tenants the county has to offer. In a small rural county, the cost of a problematic tenancy — in time, money, and local reputation — is proportionally higher than in larger markets. Thorough written leases, proper notice documentation, and careful upfront screening are not optional extras here; they are the foundation of a well-run rental property in the Ozark hill country.
Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law in Izard County
All residential rental relationships in Izard County are governed entirely by statewide Arkansas law. 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. There is no local rent control, no just-cause eviction requirement, and no landlord licensing requirement in Melbourne, Horseshoe Bend, Calico Rock, or anywhere else in Izard County.
For nonpayment of rent, serve a written 3-day notice to vacate after rent is at least 5 days past due. For lease violations other than nonpayment, provide a 14-day written notice to cure or quit. Month-to-month tenancies require 30 days’ written notice to terminate; week-to-week require 7 days. Security deposits are capped at two months’ rent for landlords with six or more rental units and must be returned with written itemized deductions within 60 days of lease termination. Arkansas imposes no default implied warranty of habitability; tenants have no repair-and-deduct remedy. Abandoned property may be disposed of after lease termination. Self-help evictions are prohibited.
All evictions in Izard County are filed with Circuit/County Clerk Joe Cooper at the Izard County Courthouse, P.O. Box 95, Melbourne, AR 72556, (870) 368-4316. Izard County is a wet county.
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 Izard County. Consult a licensed Arkansas attorney or contact the 16th Judicial Circuit Court Clerk at (870) 368-4316 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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