Arkansas remains a landlord-friendly state with no rent control or caps on increases as of 2026. Tenants must understand notice rules, lease protections, and illegal practices to navigate potential hikes effectively.
No Rent Control or Caps
Arkansas has no statewide or local rent control laws limiting how much landlords can raise rent. Landlords can increase rent by any amount at lease renewal or end, as long as proper notice is given. This applies to both fixed-term and month-to-month tenancies, with market rates dictating typical adjustments.
Notice Requirements
Landlords must provide written notice before any rent increase. For month-to-month leases, this is at least 30 days (one rental period); week-to-week requires 7 days. Notices should specify the new amount and effective date—verbal notices are invalid.
| Tenancy Type | Minimum Notice | Effective Date |
|---|---|---|
| Month-to-Month | 30 days | One month after notice |
| Week-to-Week | 7 days | One week after notice |
Fixed-Term vs. Month-to-Month Leases
During a fixed-term lease (e.g., one year), rent cannot increase unless the lease explicitly allows it. Increases occur at renewal via a new lease offer. Month-to-month tenancies, common after fixed terms expire, allow hikes after proper notice but no mandated frequency limit—though annual is standard.
Prohibited Increases
Rent hikes are illegal if discriminatory (e.g., based on race, disability under Fair Housing Act) or retaliatory (e.g., after repair requests). Tenants can challenge these in court, potentially voiding the increase. Lease violations or nonpayment do not justify retaliatory raises.
Tenant Protections and Rights
Tenants have rights to habitable units (working plumbing, heat, no pests) and privacy (24-hour entry notice). Security deposits max two months’ rent for larger landlords. Resources like Arkansas Legal Services offer free aid for disputes. Negotiate longer fixed leases for stability.
Responding to a Rent Increase
Review your lease upon notice. Accept by continuing payment, negotiate lower hikes, or give 30-day notice to vacate. Document everything; if unjust, contact the Attorney General’s office or HUD. Shop markets early—average 2026 hikes align with inflation around 3-5%, but no cap enforces this.
Practical Tips for Tenants
Build savings for hikes, track local rents via sites like Zillow, and communicate early with landlords. Join tenant unions for advocacy. In 2026, no new laws cap increases, but monitor legislative updates. Fixed leases provide the best short-term protection.
SOURCES:
- https://www.steadily.com/blog/how-much-can-a-landlord-raise-rent-in-arkansas
- https://www.hemlane.com/resources/arkansas-rent-control-laws/












