#1 Landlord Community

⚖️ Eviction Laws
🔄 Compare Evictions
📚 State Laws
🔎 Search Laws
🏛️ Courthouse Finder
⏱️ Timeline Tool
📖 Glossary
📊 Scorecard
💰 Security Deposits
🏠 Back to Legal Resources Hub
🏠 Law-Buddy
🏠 Compare State Laws
🏠 Quick Eviction Data
🔎 Notice Calculator
🔎 Cost Estimator
🔎 Timeline Calculator
🔎 Eviction Readiness
💰 Full Landlord Tenant Laws

Benton County Arkansas
Benton County · Arkansas

Benton County Landlord-Tenant Law

Arkansas landlord guide — county ordinances, courthouse info & local rules

📍 County Seat: Bentonville
👥 Pop. ~284,333
⚖️ 19th Judicial Circuit Court
🏪 Walmart HQ / Northwest Arkansas / Fastest-Growing Metro in Arkansas

Benton County Rental Market Overview

Benton County is Arkansas’s most economically dynamic county by nearly every measure — and operates in a different league from the rest of the state’s rental market. With a 2020 census population of 284,333 and an estimated population growing by more than 40 people per day in 2025, it ranks as the second most populous county in Arkansas and one of the 20 fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the United States. The county is the anchor of the Northwest Arkansas metro, which includes Rogers, Springdale, and Fayetteville across Benton and Washington counties, and is driven primarily by the global corporate headquarters of Walmart — the world’s largest company by revenue — located in Bentonville, the county seat. Bentonville’s median household income of approximately $112,792 is the highest of any major city in Arkansas and slightly above the national median, a product of the high-wage corporate and technology employment base the Walmart ecosystem generates.

The Benton County rental market reflects this exceptional economic foundation. Average rents in Benton County ran approximately $1,650 per month in 2024 — far above the Arkansas statewide average — with average home prices of $449,750. More than 40 Walmart supplier companies maintain offices in Northwest Arkansas to be near Walmart’s home office, and a growing technology sector, along with Tyson Foods, J.B. Hunt, and other Fortune 500 companies headquartered in the region, sustain a corporate workforce that drives consistent, high-quality rental demand. All evictions in Benton County are filed in the 19th Judicial Circuit Court. Arkansas state law governs all residential leases with no local rent control or just-cause eviction requirements.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Bentonville
Population ~284,333 (2020 census; 300,000+ estimated 2025)
Key Communities Bentonville, Rogers, Bella Vista, Centerton, Pea Ridge, Gravette, Siloam Springs, Lowell
Court 19th Judicial Circuit Court
Avg. Rent (2024) ~$1,650/mo (Benton County avg.)
Rent Control None
Just-Cause Eviction Not required
Median HH Income ~$112,792 (Bentonville; highest in AR)

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 3-Day Notice to Vacate
Lease Violation 14-Day Notice to Cure or Quit
Month-to-Month Term. 30-Day Written Notice
Week-to-Week Term. 7-Day Written Notice
Eviction Filing Unlawful Detainer / Complaint
Tenant Response Window 5 days after summons
Eviction Timeline 3–6 weeks typical
Security Deposit Cap 2 months rent (6+ unit landlords)
Security Deposit Return 60 days after termination
Statute A.C.A. §§ 18-16-101; 18-17-101 et seq.

Benton County Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
Rental Licensing No county-level rental license required. Arkansas has no statewide landlord licensing statute. Verify with individual cities — Bentonville, Rogers, Bella Vista, Centerton, Siloam Springs — for any municipal rental registration, inspection, or code enforcement requirements within their city limits. The rapid growth in Benton County has prompted some municipalities to increase code enforcement activity; check with local planning and zoning offices before listing new rental properties.
Rent Control None. Arkansas has no statewide rent control statute and Benton County has no local rent control ordinance. Landlords may raise rents freely at renewal with proper notice per lease terms or state law. Despite rapidly rising rents in the NWA metro, no rent control measures have been enacted at the county or city level.
Security Deposit Capped at 2 months’ rent (A.C.A. § 18-16-304). Arkansas’s security deposit statute applies only to landlords renting six or more dwellings. Must be returned with written itemized deductions within 60 days of lease termination (A.C.A. § 18-16-305). Permissible deductions: unpaid rent, damages beyond normal wear and tear. Full deposit may be withheld if total damages and unpaid rent exceed the deposit amount. Given the premium rental market in Benton County, maximum deposits are commonly collected.
Eviction Court — 19th Judicial Circuit All Benton County eviction proceedings are filed in the 19th Judicial Circuit Court. Benton County Circuit Clerk: 102 NE “A” St., Bentonville, AR 72712; Phone: (479) 271-1015; Fax: (479) 271-5719. The 19th Circuit serves Benton County exclusively and has multiple circuit judges given the county’s large population. Due to Benton County’s rapid growth, the court system is active and well-staffed. Eviction hearings are generally scheduled efficiently.
Notice to Vacate — Nonpayment Written 3-day notice to vacate required before filing for unlawful detainer for nonpayment of rent. Landlords must also wait at least 5 days after rent is past due before beginning eviction proceedings under the Residential Landlord-Tenant Act (A.C.A. § 18-17-901). Deliver in writing and retain all proof of service.
Lease Violation Notice For non-rent violations, provide a written 14-day notice to cure or quit identifying the specific violation (A.C.A. § 18-17-701). If remedied within 14 days, lease continues. If not, landlord may file for eviction. For illegal acts, no notice is required.
Month-to-Month Termination 30-day written notice required to terminate a month-to-month tenancy (A.C.A. § 18-17-704). Week-to-week tenancies require 7-day written notice. Notice must specify the termination date.
Walmart & Corporate Ecosystem Tenants Walmart’s global home office employs tens of thousands in Bentonville and is supplemented by hundreds of supplier and vendor companies — over 1,000 nationwide suppliers maintain NWA offices — that relocate employees to be near Walmart’s buying teams. These corporate transferees and Walmart associates represent the highest-quality tenant profiles in the Benton County market: high W-2 incomes, stable corporate employment, relocation assistance, and short application-to-move timelines. Many arrive on corporate relocation packages and need housing quickly. Standard pay stub and employer verification applies. Be aware that Walmart periodically restructures its workforce — a 2025 restructuring affected approximately 1,500 employees — though the overall employment base remains enormous and demand has not materially declined.
Tech Sector & Startup Ecosystem Northwest Arkansas has developed a meaningful technology sector anchored by Walmart’s technology operations and complemented by a growing startup and innovation ecosystem. The Walmart AMP (Applied Machine Learning & Product) team, Walmart Global Tech, and numerous retail technology companies have established NWA presences. Technology workers in this ecosystem bring professional salaries and strong financial profiles. Verify with standard documentation; tech employment can occasionally involve equity compensation, RSUs, or variable bonus structures — focus income verification on base salary rather than variable compensation for rent qualification purposes.
Affordability Gap & Workforce Housing Benton County’s rapid growth has created a significant affordability gap between high-wage corporate workers and the service, hospitality, healthcare, and retail workers who support the regional economy. Median rents increased 38% in Bentonville between 2017 and 2022, outpacing many workers’ income growth. The Walton Family Foundation has commissioned multiple housing studies identifying this gap as a critical regional challenge. Landlords in Benton County should be aware that many service-sector applicants — hospitality workers, retail employees, healthcare support staff — may earn incomes that qualify at standard 3x rent ratios only at lower rent thresholds. Apply income qualification standards consistently and fairly across all applicant types per Fair Housing requirements.
Corporate Relocation & Lease Terms Corporate transferees arriving at Walmart or supplier companies often need leases on non-standard timelines — mid-month starts, 13-month leases to avoid renewal at the same time each year, or shorter initial terms while they decide whether to purchase. Consider offering flexible lease start dates and term lengths for corporate applicants willing to pay a slight premium for the flexibility. Furnished short-term corporate housing is also a premium market segment in Bentonville that commands significantly higher monthly rates than unfurnished long-term rentals.
Multifamily & New Construction Market Over 7,300 new apartment units were under construction in the NWA region in 2024-2025, with another 21,100 announced. Despite this massive pipeline, the regional vacancy rate remained at just 3.3% as of mid-2025, reflecting extraordinary demand. New construction in Benton County is concentrated in Bentonville, Rogers, Centerton, and Pea Ridge. Individual landlords competing with Class A apartment complexes should differentiate on flexibility, responsiveness, and value rather than amenities. The regional rental vacancy rate favors landlords significantly but pricing discipline matters — overpriced listings are sitting longer even in a tight market.
No Warranty of Habitability (Default) Arkansas does not impose a general implied warranty of habitability on private residential rentals. Landlords may rent property as-is unless the lease specifies otherwise. Leases signed after October 2021 under the Residential Landlord-Tenant Act carry some habitability rights unless waived in writing by the tenant. In the competitive Benton County market, however, tenants with strong profiles have leverage to negotiate lease terms — poorly maintained properties will lose quality applicants to better-maintained alternatives.
Abandoned Property Upon lease termination — voluntary or involuntary — any personal property left in the dwelling is considered abandoned and may be disposed of by the landlord without tenant recourse (A.C.A. § 18-16-108). All such property is subject to a landlord’s lien for unpaid rent.
Source of Income / HCV No state or local source-of-income protections in Arkansas. Landlords are not required to accept Housing Choice Vouchers. Contact the Benton County Housing Authority for current HCV payment standards in the Bentonville, Rogers, and Bella Vista markets. Given the county’s high median income, HCV payment standards may not cover prevailing market rents in all areas.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited. Landlords may not remove tenants through lockouts, utility shutoffs, or removal of belongings without a court order. Arkansas courts assess damages on a case-by-case basis. Always use the lawful judicial eviction process through the 19th Circuit Court in Bentonville.
Late Fees & NSF Checks No statutory cap on late fees in Arkansas. Specify the late fee amount and any grace period clearly in the written lease. For returned/bounced checks, landlords may charge $30 per check plus any bank fees (A.C.A. § 5-37-307(c)(2)(B)).

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: Association of Arkansas Counties

🏛️ Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Arkansas

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Arkansas
Filing Fee 65-165
Total Est. Range $100-$350
Service: — Writ: —

Arkansas State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

3
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
14
Days Notice (Violation)
15-30
Avg Total Days
$65-165
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 3-Day Notice to Quit (Civil unlawful detainer) / 10-Day Notice (Criminal failure to vacate)
Notice Period 3 days
Tenant Can Cure? No - 3-day civil notice is unconditional quit; tenant must vacate (landlord not required to accept late rent)
Days to Hearing 5-15 days
Days to Writ 1-5 days
Total Estimated Timeline 15-30 days
Total Estimated Cost $100-$350
⚠️ Watch Out

Arkansas historically had a criminal eviction statute allowing landlords to charge tenants with a misdemeanor for failure to vacate. This was struck down in 2023 but some counties still reference it. Civil unlawful detainer is now the primary path.

Underground Landlord

📝 Arkansas Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Circuit Court (or District Court with concurrent jurisdiction). Pay the filing fee (~$65-165).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Arkansas eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Arkansas attorney or local legal aid organization.
🐛 See an error on this page? Let us know
Underground Landlord Underground Landlord
🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Arkansas landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Arkansas — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Arkansas's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
Ready to File?

Generate Arkansas-Compliant Legal Documents

AI-generated, state-specific eviction notices, pay-or-quit letters, lease termination documents, and more — pre-filled with your tenant's information and built to Arkansas requirements.

Generate a Document → View AI Hub →

🔎 Notice Calculator

📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
Underground LandlordUnderground Landlord

🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Key communities: Bentonville, Rogers, Bella Vista, Centerton, Pea Ridge, Siloam Springs, Gravette, Lowell, Cave Springs, Highfill.

Benton County market: Walmart corporate and supplier employees are the strongest profiles — high W-2 income, stable employment, fast-moving relocations. Tech sector workers also strong. Service, retail, and hospitality workers may qualify at lower price points — verify income carefully. Corporate relocation tenants often need flexible lease terms. Vacancy rate 3.3% — landlord-favorable but overpriced units are sitting longer. File evictions at 19th Circuit Court, 102 NE “A” St., Bentonville — (479) 271-1015.

Arkansas key rules: 3-day notice (nonpayment), 14-day cure notice (violations), 30-day month-to-month termination, no rent control, 60-day deposit return, 2-month deposit cap (6+ unit landlords), no habitability warranty by default, no repair-and-deduct.

Benton County Landlords

Screen Every Applicant Before You Sign →

Background checks, eviction history, credit reports — get the full picture before handing over the keys.

Benton County Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law: A Guide for Rental Property Owners in Bentonville, Rogers, and the Northwest Arkansas Corporate Corridor

Benton County is not like other Arkansas counties, and any landlord who approaches it with the same expectations they’d bring to a rural Delta market or a small Ozark town will misread it badly in both directions. This is a county where the median household income in the county seat exceeds $112,000 — higher than most major American cities and well above the national median. It is a county where more than 40 people arrive every single day, drawn by corporate employment opportunities at one of the most consequential companies in human commercial history. It is a county where a 3.3% rental vacancy rate coexists with over 7,000 new apartment units under construction. And it is a county where Arkansas’s landlord-friendly legal framework — no rent control, no habitability warranty, no just-cause eviction requirement — applies in full, giving property owners operating in one of America’s strongest rental markets an unusually favorable legal position. Understanding Benton County means understanding Walmart, understanding the ecosystem it has created, and understanding how that ecosystem shapes every dimension of the rental market.

The Walmart Effect: How One Company Transformed a County

Walmart was founded by Sam Walton in Rogers, Arkansas, in 1962, and its global home office has been in Bentonville ever since. The company is the world’s largest employer by revenue, the world’s largest private employer, and one of the most operationally consequential institutions in global retail, logistics, and supply chain management. What this means for Benton County is difficult to overstate. Every major consumer products company that sells through Walmart — and that means essentially every major consumer products company in the world — maintains a supplier office in Northwest Arkansas to be physically close to Walmart’s buying, merchandising, and technology teams. Over 1,000 supplier companies have established NWA presences. When you add Walmart’s own direct employment base of tens of thousands in Bentonville to the supplier ecosystem surrounding it, the result is a concentration of high-wage corporate employment in a relatively small geographic area that is genuinely unusual in the American economy outside of a handful of major metropolitan markets.

For landlords, the Walmart ecosystem creates a distinctive and highly favorable tenant pool. Corporate employees relocating to work at Walmart or at supplier companies arrive with employer relocation packages, high salaries, strong credit histories, and the financial stability that comes with blue-chip corporate employment. A Walmart senior buyer, a supplier company vice president of sales, or a Walmart Global Tech engineer all represent the kind of applicant that landlords in other markets rarely see: financially robust, professionally accountable, and highly motivated to maintain good standing as tenants because their job and their community relationships both depend on it. These tenants pay on time, communicate professionally, and tend to maintain properties well. They also move frequently as careers advance, which means turnover in the corporate tenant segment is real — typically one to three year tenancies rather than long-term multi-year occupancies — but replacement demand is consistent because the corporate relocation pipeline is continuous.

Screening corporate applicants in Benton County requires a few specific adaptations. Pay stub verification is straightforward for salaried employees. For applicants whose compensation includes Walmart restricted stock units or supplier company equity grants, focus income qualification on base salary rather than total compensation including vesting equity — vesting equity is valuable but not liquid monthly income. Corporate relocations sometimes happen on compressed timelines, with applicants needing to execute a lease within days of an offer acceptance. Being responsive and flexible on lease start timing is a competitive advantage in this tenant segment, where the best corporate applicants may have multiple options and will choose the landlord who moves efficiently. Furnished corporate housing — fully furnished properties available on flexible one-to-twelve month terms for executives and relocating employees who haven’t yet found permanent housing — is a premium niche in Bentonville that commands significantly higher monthly rates than unfurnished long-term rentals and is worth considering for owners with the right property types.

Northwest Arkansas Growth: The Numbers Behind the Market

Benton County’s population of 284,333 in the 2020 census has continued growing at a rate that places Northwest Arkansas consistently among the twenty fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the country. The NWA Council estimates that more than 40 people per day were arriving in the region as of 2025 — a pace that, sustained over a year, adds 14,600 residents annually. The region is expected to surpass one million residents by 2050 according to the Arkansas Economic Development Institute. This population growth is not driven by natural increase but by economic migration — people moving specifically for employment, and the employment is not going away because the companies are not going away.

The rental market reflects this growth pressure in concrete numbers. In 2024, Benton County saw 2,417 leased residential properties, a 38% increase over 2023’s 2,067. Average rents in Benton County ran approximately $1,650 per month in 2024, with an average days-on-market of just 23 days — meaning quality rental properties in Benton County were leasing in under a month on average. The regional vacancy rate sat at just 3.3% even as over 7,300 new apartment units were under construction, a testament to the extraordinary depth of demand. The median sales price for homes in Benton County reached $386,565 in 2025, up 3.1% from 2024, following a period of double-digit appreciation that saw home values rise over 67% in five years. These are not small-market Arkansas numbers — they are competitive with some of the most active markets in the broader Sun Belt region.

The growth is also geographically distributed in ways that matter for landlords. While Bentonville, Rogers, and Bella Vista carry the highest name recognition, the county’s growth is pushing into newer communities. Centerton, Pea Ridge, Gravette, Gentry, and Cave Springs have all seen significant residential development as land costs in the core cities rise and buyers and renters look for affordable options within reasonable commuting distance of Walmart and the major employment centers. The Walton Family Foundation’s 2025 housing report specifically noted that 61% of growth in the NWA region is occurring outside the four largest cities, as developers and residents alike are priced toward the urban periphery. Landlords in these outlying communities can capture strong demand at price points that attract workforce tenants priced out of central Bentonville and Rogers.

The Affordability Gap and What It Means for Screening

The same forces that make Benton County so attractive for high-wage corporate landlords have created a genuine affordability challenge for the workforce that supports the regional economy. Between 2017 and 2022, median rents increased 38% in Bentonville — faster than statewide wage growth for many occupations. A grocery worker, a restaurant employee, a healthcare aide, or a retail associate earning $15 to $20 per hour faces a rental market where average rents require an income of nearly $5,000 per month at standard 3x qualification ratios. The Walton Family Foundation has commissioned multiple studies identifying this gap as one of the most significant threats to the region’s long-term economic health, noting that some employers report difficulty retaining service-sector employees who cannot find affordable housing near their workplaces.

For landlords, this affordability gap creates a bifurcated market. At the higher end — $1,400 and above per month in most Benton County communities — demand comes primarily from the corporate ecosystem and is strong and consistent. At the lower end — properties affordable to service-sector workers earning $30,000 to $45,000 per year — demand is intense but the applicant pool requires more careful income verification. A service worker with strong rental history and consistent employment at a fast food chain or grocery store may earn $2,200 to $2,800 per month, qualifying only for rents of $700 to $900 at standard ratios. These applicants are not weak — they represent the workforce infrastructure the region needs — but qualifying them for higher-priced properties requires either lower qualification thresholds, co-signers, or properties priced at their qualification level. Apply income and credit screening criteria consistently across all applicant types as required by the federal Fair Housing Act.

The Eviction Process in Benton County

All Benton County evictions are filed in the 19th Judicial Circuit Court, which serves Benton County exclusively. The Circuit Clerk’s office is located at 102 NE “A” Street, Bentonville, AR 72712, reachable at (479) 271-1015. Given Benton County’s population of over 284,000 and its rapid growth, the court system is well-staffed and handles a significant volume of civil matters, including evictions. The standard Arkansas eviction sequence applies: for nonpayment, wait at least five days after rent is due, then serve a written 3-day notice to vacate. After notice expiration, file a complaint for unlawful detainer at the 19th Circuit Court. The tenant receives a summons and has five days to file a written objection. If no objection is filed, the Benton County Sheriff may remove the tenant. If an objection is filed, a hearing is scheduled. The typical timeline from notice expiration to enforcement runs three to six weeks.

In a county with Benton County’s income profile and tight vacancy rate, formal evictions are relatively uncommon — most tenants who can afford the market rents have the financial capacity to cure payment issues before legal proceedings become necessary, and strong demand means that tenants who do fall behind generally have incentive to resolve the situation quickly to avoid losing their housing in a competitive market. That said, evictions do occur, and the same Arkansas rules apply here as anywhere: no self-help, no lockouts, no utility shutoffs. The process must go through the court.

Crystal Bridges, the Walton Legacy, and NWA’s Cultural Identity

No account of Benton County is complete without acknowledging the cultural dimension of the Walton family’s investment in the region, because it directly affects the county’s appeal as a place to live and therefore the depth of rental demand. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, opened in 2011 and funded by Alice Walton, is a world-class institution that has brought a level of cultural infrastructure to Bentonville that is genuinely extraordinary for a city of its size. The museum’s collection includes works by Georgia O’Keeffe, Andy Warhol, Norman Rockwell, and many other major American artists, and admission has been free since its opening — a deliberate decision to make it accessible to the entire community. The Alice L. Walton School of Medicine, which opened its doors to students in Bentonville in July 2025, represents a further commitment to building institutional depth in the region. These investments, alongside the Bentonville Film Festival, a nationally recognized mountain biking trail system, and a walkable downtown that has attracted restaurants, shops, and hospitality businesses, have made Bentonville a genuinely attractive place to live for people who could choose to live nearly anywhere.

This cultural quality-of-life investment is part of why Benton County’s growth is not solely corporate-driven. The region is attracting remote workers, entrepreneurs, artists, and retirees who simply want to live in a place with strong amenities, natural beauty, outdoor recreation, and a dynamic community. Beaver Lake in eastern Benton County offers fishing, boating, and recreation. The Razorback Regional Greenway provides a 36-mile paved trail connecting Bentonville to Fayetteville. The region’s quality of life has been profiled in national media and has drawn a diverse, educated population that makes Benton County’s rental market one of the most interesting and dynamic in the mid-South. For landlords who own well-maintained properties in desirable locations, the tenant pool in Benton County is as strong as anything Arkansas has to offer.

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 Benton County. Consult a licensed Arkansas attorney or contact the 19th Judicial Circuit Court Clerk at (479) 271-1015 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page 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. Consult a licensed Arkansas attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.

Explore by State

ALAKAZARCACOCTDEDCFLGAHIIDILINIAKSKYLAMEMDMAMIMNMSMOMTNENVNHNJNMNYNCNDOHOKORPARISCSDTNTXUTVTVAWAWVWIWY

Click any state to explore resources