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HOA management software · Arkansas

HOA Management Software in Arkansas

Everything a Arkansas board or manager needs to run a community — without a management company.

Homeowners associations are a meaningful and growing part of the housing picture in Arkansas. Arkansas's HOA communities cluster around the booming Northwest Arkansas corridor — Bentonville, Fayetteville, and Rogers — and the Little Rock metro. The Bentonville-area boom tied to corporate growth has produced newer, amenity-heavy communities very different from Arkansas's older Little Rock subdivisions.

Anthoam is built for self-managed communities: one platform for dues, accounting, maintenance, voting, meetings, and documents, priced per door. This page covers how HOAs work in Arkansas, the state's reserve-funding norms, and the Southeast maintenance realities that shape every Arkansas budget.

How HOAs are governed in Arkansas

Arkansas does not have a single comprehensive HOA statute the way states like California or Florida do. Instead, Arkansas associations are governed primarily by their own recorded declaration and bylaws, the state's nonprofit corporation law, and — for condominiums — the state condominium act.

That makes the community's governing documents the operative rulebook for elections, assessments, and covenant enforcement. The Bentonville-area boom tied to corporate growth has produced newer, amenity-heavy communities very different from Arkansas's older Little Rock subdivisions.

Reserve funding for Arkansas HOAs

Arkansas does not impose a statewide reserve-funding mandate on HOAs — reserve adequacy is governed by the association's own documents and prudent financial practice — but underfunded reserves are the single most common cause of surprise special assessments.

Whatever the legal floor, the cheapest way to pay for a roof, a road, or a clubhouse is to save for it steadily before it fails. A current reserve study and a realistic annual contribution are what keep a Arkansas community off the special-assessment treadmill.

Southeast maintenance realities for Arkansas communities

Communities across the Southeast deal with hot, humid summers, heavy thunderstorms, the occasional ice storm, and a long pollen and growing season that keeps landscaping crews busy most of the year. Humidity drives mildew on siding and roofs, and freeze-thaw at the northern edge of the region cracks pavement.

Pressure-washing, roof cleaning, and tree work recur often, and aging asphalt needs attention sooner than a dry-climate study would project. For boards in Little Rock, Fayetteville, and Bentonville and across Arkansas, the maintenance calendar and the reserve plan have to reflect these local conditions, not a generic national template.

  • Regular pressure-washing and roof cleaning to fight humidity and mildew
  • Storm cleanup and tree management through a long severe-weather season
  • Asphalt repair on a faster cycle from heat and seasonal freeze-thaw
  • Year-round landscaping budgets for a long growing season

Self-managing your Arkansas HOA with Anthoam

From Little Rock, Fayetteville, Bentonville, and Rogers to smaller communities across Arkansas, Anthoam gives boards and managers one platform to run the whole community — dues and online payments, accounting and reserves, maintenance and vendors, voting, meetings, and documents — for a flat per-door price, with no management company required. Self-managing replaces a percentage-based management fee with one predictable cost, and setup is self-serve: start your community in minutes and invite your owners the same day.

HOA management in Arkansas — FAQ

Run your HOA yourself with Anthoam

One platform for dues, accounting, maintenance, voting, and documents — priced per door, with no management company required.