Montgomery County Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law: The Quartz Capital of the World, Arkansas’s Largest Lake, Lum and Abner, and What Every Landlord Needs to Know
Deep beneath the Ouachita Mountains of west-central Arkansas, millions of years ago, silica-saturated hydrothermal fluids forced their way up through fractures in the uplifted stone and slowly cooled, precipitating crystals into the rock veins. The result — concentrated in a geological band running through the Crystal Mountains near Mount Ida — is some of the world’s finest quartz crystal: clear, pure, and occurring in formations from thumbnail-sized points to multi-foot clusters. The area’s quartz is so pure it has been used in precision electronics, oscillators for radio and military communication equipment, fine jewelry, and an essentially infinite variety of decorative and metaphysical applications. Mount Ida, the county seat of Montgomery County, calls itself the “Quartz Crystal Capital of the World.” This is not marketing puffery. It is geology.
The quartz deposits have shaped the county’s economy in specific ways. The first commercial quartz claim was filed in 1904. During World War II, quartz from Fisher Mountain near Mount Ida was specifically mined for use in electronic oscillators for military radio communication equipment — the county’s crystals played a direct role in the war effort. In the postwar decades, the quartz industry shifted from industrial supply to tourism, and today a half-dozen or more fee-to-dig mining operations allow visitors to excavate their own crystals for modest daily fees. Rock shops line the highways into Mount Ida. The annual World Championship Quartz Crystal Dig and Quartz, Quilts, and Crafts Festival in October draws visitors from across the country. The county produces approximately 6,000 pounds of commercial quartz per year in this tourist-oriented format.
Lake Ouachita: Arkansas’s Largest, Cleanest Lake
In 1952, the US Army Corps of Engineers completed Blakely Mountain Dam on the Ouachita River, creating Lake Ouachita — Arkansas’s largest lake, stretching approximately 40 miles from the dam near Hot Springs westward into Montgomery County. With roughly 40,100 acres of surface area, 975 miles of shoreline, and more than 200 islands scattered across its clear water, Lake Ouachita is consistently rated one of the cleanest lakes in the United States. It draws anglers pursuing striped bass that can top 50 pounds, largemouth bass, catfish, crappie, and bream. Professional fishing guides operate on the lake year-round. The lake also supports boating, water skiing, kayaking, and paddleboarding, with full-service marinas and resorts including Mountain Harbor Resort & Spa on the western shore.
For landlords, the lake is the county’s most powerful driver of both tourism employment and short-term rental demand. Properties with lake access, docks, or water views near Lake Ouachita represent one of the stronger STR market opportunities in rural Arkansas. The combination of year-round fishing, spring and summer family recreation, and fall hunting and mountain biking creates multi-season demand. The 47-mile Lake Ouachita Vista Trail (LOViT) — designated an “Epic Trail” by the International Mountain Bicycling Association and running along the south shore of the lake through old-growth timber — adds a mountain biking and hiking visitor base to the recreational draw. The 37-mile Womble Trail, the 26-mile Eagle Rock Loop backpacking route, and Little Missouri Falls round out the outdoor recreation portfolio.
Lum and Abner: The Radio Comedy Born in Pine Ridge
About 20 miles west of Mount Ida on Arkansas Highway 88, in the small community of Pine Ridge, stands one of the more unusual cultural landmarks in rural Arkansas: the Lum and Abner Museum and Jot ’Em Down Store. The museum honors the beloved radio comedy program Lum and Abner, which broadcast nationally from 1931 to 1955 and featured the fictional characters of Columbus “Lum” Edwards and Abner Peabody — proprietors of the Jot ’Em Down Store in the fictional Arkansas village of Pine Ridge. The show’s creator, Chester Lauck, was born in Allene, Arkansas. The real community of Waters, Arkansas, formally renamed itself Pine Ridge in 1936 in honor of the fictional village. The original store buildings are preserved on the National Register of Historic Places, and the museum draws visitors who remember the show from its original run or have discovered it through recordings.
Screening in a Tourism-Driven Mountain County
Montgomery County’s rental market is shaped by its tourism-dependent economy and the federal government’s dominant presence as a landowner (85% of the county in the Ouachita National Forest). This creates three primary tenant income profiles worth understanding individually. Tourism and hospitality workers — resort staff, fishing guides, crystal mine operators, trail-related businesses — have variable income tied to seasonal recreational patterns. Use annual income averages rather than peak-season rates; ask explicitly about full-year versus seasonal employment status. US Forest Service permanent employees are among the most stable tenant profiles in any rural market: GS-scale federal salaries are documented, predictable, and essentially recession-proof. USFS seasonal employees (fire crews, summer trail maintenance) have shorter work periods; verify annual income accordingly. Retirees drawn to the mountain and lake setting — a growing segment as the county’s median age rises — provide Social Security, pension, and investment income documentation that is among the most straightforward to verify.
Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law in Montgomery County
All residential rental relationships in Montgomery County are governed entirely by statewide Arkansas law — 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 Mount Ida or Montgomery 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, serve a 14-day 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 does not impose a 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 Montgomery County are filed with Circuit/County Clerk Regina Powell, 105 Hwy. 270 East, Mount Ida, AR 71957, (870) 867-3521. Montgomery 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 Montgomery County. Consult a licensed Arkansas attorney or contact the 18th West Judicial Circuit Court Clerk at (870) 867-3521 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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