HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Arkansas: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
TLDR
Arkansas does not mandate reserve studies under the Property Owners' Association Act (Ark. Code §18-13-101) or the Horizontal Property Act, but HOA board members still owe fiduciary duties. Boards that fail to plan for capital expenditures risk personal liability and damaging special assessments.
Arkansas’s Property Owners’ Association Act (Ark. Code §18-13-101 et seq.) and Horizontal Property Act establish the governance framework for community associations in the state but mandate no specific reserve study requirements. Compliance obligations run through fiduciary duty principles and the requirements of individual governing documents. Both are real. Courts have applied fiduciary duty standards to Arkansas board decisions about capital planning, and private reserve requirements in declarations can be enforced by unit owners.
Northwest Arkansas is the state’s fastest-growing HOA market, driven by Walmart, Tyson Foods, and a growing cluster of technology companies in Fayetteville, Springdale, and Rogers. Many boards formed in that wave are managing HOA governance for the first time. In fast-growing markets, reserves feel unnecessary when communities are new. By the time major capital expenditures come due, years of underfunding have created a remediation problem that requires painful special assessments. Little Rock’s established market has communities at more mature stages of their capital cycle, where the consequences of reserve neglect are often immediate.
BoardStack enforces account separation to prevent commingling, provides capital tracking tools that help new boards plan reserve schedules from day one, and creates the documentation trail that supports a fiduciary defense. Arkansas boards in fast-growing markets need that infrastructure from the start.
Arkansas Property Owners' Association Act (Ark. Code §18-13-101)
Arkansas's Property Owners' Association Act (Ark. Code §18-13-101 et seq.) establishes the framework for homeowners association governance in the state. The Act does not require associations to conduct reserve studies or maintain minimum reserve funding levels, but it imposes fiduciary duties on board members.
Horizontal Property Act (Ark. Code §18-13-201)
Arkansas's Horizontal Property Act governs condominium regimes and requires boards to manage common elements and association finances responsibly. The Act does not include explicit reserve study mandates, but its requirement to manage common elements creates an implicit obligation to plan for capital expenditures.
Fiduciary Duty Standard
Arkansas HOA board members owe fiduciary duties under Ark. Code §18-13-105 and general Arkansas corporate law. Courts have applied these duties to require boards to plan for foreseeable capital expenditures — the absence of an explicit reserve mandate does not shield a board that neglects long-term maintenance needs.
Governing Document Requirements
Many Arkansas associations have reserve fund requirements embedded in their CC&Rs or bylaws. These private obligations are enforceable by unit owners regardless of what state law requires. Boards should review their governing documents before concluding that no reserve obligation applies.
| Metro Area | Estimated HOA Communities | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Little Rock / North Little Rock | ~1,400+ | Capital city; largest market; mix of condo and planned community associations |
| Fayetteville / Springdale / Rogers | ~1,000+ | Fast-growing Northwest Arkansas market; corporate headquarters workforce drives demand |
| Jonesboro | ~300+ | Northeast Arkansas regional market; Arkansas State University community |
| Fort Smith | ~200+ | Western Arkansas border market; smaller HOA concentration |
What does Arkansas law require for HOA reserve funds?
Arkansas's Property Owners' Association Act (Ark. Code §18-13-101 et seq.) and Horizontal Property Act do not mandate reserve studies or specific reserve funding levels. Board members owe fiduciary duties under Ark. Code §18-13-105 and general Arkansas law that require planning for capital expenditures, and many Arkansas associations have private reserve requirements in their governing documents.
How should Arkansas boards in fast-growing Northwest Arkansas approach reserve planning?
New communities in Fayetteville, Springdale, and Rogers are in the early stages of their capital expenditure cycle — reserve needs appear distant when the community is new. Boards should commission reserve studies early, establish dedicated reserve accounts from the first year, and adopt funding plans that accumulate reserves before major capital expenditures become necessary. Waiting until common elements fail is far more expensive and legally risky than proactive planning.
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