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Jacksonville, Arkansas

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Jacksonville

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Jacksonville, AR

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STR Regulations for Jacksonville, Arkansas

Overview: Are Short-Term Rentals Allowed in Jacksonville, AR?

Yes. Short-term rentals (STRs) such as Airbnb and VRBO are generally allowed in Jacksonville, AR, but they must be operated in compliance with city zoning, business licensing, health and safety standards, and any local codes administered by the City’s Code Enforcement Division. While specific STR licensing details are not publicly posted on the city website at this time, state law and municipal policy allow cities to require registration and licensing, address health and safety hazards, and enforce zoning rules that treat STRs as residential uses. In practice, this means your property’s zoning, your business license status, basic safety compliance, and adherence to local nuisance standards will determine whether you can operate an STR and how it must be run.

How to Start an STR Business in Jacksonville

  • Choose a Compliant Property: Confirm the property is in a zone where STRs are allowed as a residential use. Homes on military installations (e.g., Little Rock Air Force Base) typically prohibit non-military commercial activity—verify suitability and any deed restrictions.
  • Obtain a Business License: Apply for a city business license. Jacksonville’s Business Licenses/Permits are administered under the City’s Business division.
  • Secure Appropriate Insurance: Carry liability coverage suitable for transient lodging. While city-specific insurance amounts are not posted online, maintain a robust commercial general liability policy and ensure your property insurance covers short-term rental activity.
  • Establish Tax and Financial Controls: Register for state sales tax (and local taxes, if applicable). If you rent through major platforms, they may collect and remit the transient occupancy (lodging/HMR) tax on your behalf; otherwise, you must collect and remit it monthly. Maintain a dedicated accounting process for taxes and deposits.
  • Prepare for Safety and Code Compliance: Follow basic fire and building safety measures (smoke/CO detectors, fire extinguishers, egress, occupancy limits). Jacksonville Code Enforcement can respond to violations related to property maintenance, public nuisance, and unsafe conditions.
  • Draft Rental Agreements and House Rules: Include contact information for a local responsible party, house rules (noise, parking, trash, occupancy), and emergency information. Post local regulations and emergency contacts in the unit.
  • Monitor State and Local Policy: Arkansas municipalities have been discussing state-level legislation (e.g., HB 1445-style compromises) that preserves local zoning authority and allows cities to require registration, enforce safety standards, and revoke licenses for serious violations. Stay informed and adjust your compliance program as rules evolve.

Required Documents, Permits, Licenses, and Guidelines

  • City Business License (required to operate any business in Jacksonville).
  • Property Proof (deed/lease) confirming ownership/leasehold authority.
  • Insurance (commercial general liability and property coverage that contemplates STR use).
  • Safety Compliance (functional smoke/CO alarms, fire extinguishers, emergency egress, reasonable occupancy limits).
  • Registration (if city adopts an STR registry under state law; currently not published on the city site, but likely permissible under state compromise provisions).
  • Tax Registration (Arkansas state sales tax; local lodging taxes/HMR if not collected by platforms).
  • House Rules and Contact Information (local responsible party; posted in the unit and included in rental agreements).
  • Platform Compliance (posting license/registration numbers where required, local rules, and emergency contacts).

Note: Because Jacksonville’s site does not list a standalone STR license process or a local health/safety inspection protocol, treat the business license and general property/maintenance codes as your baseline compliance framework, with additional STR-specific registration/inspection requirements likely to appear as the city formalizes policy.

Specific Regulations (City, County, State)

  • City of Jacksonville: STRs are treated as a residential use under zoning; business licensing is required; city code enforcement addresses property maintenance, public nuisance, and unsafe conditions. The Code Enforcement Unit responds to complaints and actively patrols assigned areas. Report violations via the public portal or call 501-982-0688.
  • State-Level Context: A legislative compromise discussed by Arkansas mayors (similar to the HB 1445 compromise framework) preserves local zoning control while limiting certain restrictions. Under such a framework:
    • Cities can require registration and assess license fees.
    • Cities can enforce health and safety rules and revoke/suspend licenses for felonies or repeated code violations.
    • Cities must zone STRs as residential uses (but can also allow them in commercial zones).
    • Cities cannot ban STRs outright, impose blanket numerical caps, or regulate owner-occupied STRs beyond residential zoning and safety requirements.
  • Put to Work: Even where STRs are allowed, compliance with noise, parking, trash, fire code, and neighborhood protections remains critical. Violations can result in code enforcement action, license suspension/revocation, or civil penalties.

Contact Information (Local Authority in Charge of STRs)

  • Code Enforcement (primary local authority for property standards and nuisance issues)
    • Phone: 501-982-0688
    • Address: 1400 Marshall Road, Jacksonville, AR 72076
    • Report Violations: Public portal (via city website)
    • Business Licenses/Permits: City of Jacksonville Business division (see city site)
    • City Directory: Code Enforcement and Business Licensing directories are available on the city website

Links to Source Pages

  • City of Jacksonville Code Enforcement page (responsibilities, contact, reporting): www.cityofjacksonville.net/539/Code-Enforcement
  • Jacksonville Municipal Code (Code of Ordinances): library.municode.com/ar/jacksonville/ordinances/code_of_ordinances
  • Jacksonville Zoning/Housing Maintenance provisions (e.g., Section 5.09.070 enforcement references): library.municode.com/ar/jacksonville/codes/code_of_ordinances?nodeId=TIT5BULIRE_CH5.09HOMO_5.09.070EN
  • Statewide STR discussion and local control context (news coverage of Arkansas mayors opposing HB 1445 and outlining compromise): katv.com/news/local/central-arkansas-mayors-oppose-bill-removing-local-short-term-rental-restrictions-state-legislature-restriction-mayor-bart-castleberry-terry-hartwick-north-little-rock-conway-jacksonville-tourism-department-air-bnb-municipal-league-possible-compromise
  • Steadily article summarizing Arkansas Airbnb/STR laws (statewide context and compliance steps): www.steadily.com/blog/airbnb-short-term-rental-laws-and-regulations-in-arkansas

Practical Next Steps

  • Confirm your property’s zoning with the Engineering & Planning Division.
  • Apply for a city business license and set up your tax accounts.
  • Obtain adequate liability and property insurance for STR operations.
  • Establish safety protocols and post rules and contact information.
  • Register for any future STR-specific licensing or inspection program once the city publishes it, and monitor state legislative updates that may affect local authority.
Jacksonville

Market Saturation Score

036912
Mild Saturation
2/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
2–4 declining months: early saturation pressure - watch for trend persistence.
View Full Jacksonville Market Analysis →

Photos of Jacksonville

Overview of Jacksonville

Jacksonville is a city in Pulaski County, Arkansas, United States, and a suburb of Little Rock. As of the 2010 census, the population of the city was 28,364. It is part of the Little Rock–North Little Rock–Conway Metropolitan Statistical Area with 729,135 people as of 2014. The city is named for Nicholas Jackson, a landowner who deeded the land for the railroad right-of-way to the Cairo & Fulton Railroad in 1870. The community evolved from the settlement surrounding the railroad depot, eventually incorporating in 1941. In 1941, construction began on the Arkansas Ordnance Plant (AOP), which served as the primary facility for the development of fuses and detonators for World War II. Following the war, AOP ceased operations and the land was sold for commercial interests, including the development of the Little Rock Air Force Base in 1955. Today, portions of AOP still remain, including the Arkansas Ordnance Plant Guard House, which is on the National Register of Historic Places and the Jacksonville Museum of Military History. Despite Pulaski County being an Arkansas county that is not a "dry" county, as it allows the sales of beer and liquor, the municipal limits of Jacksonville are "moist", as it does not allow the sales of alcohol in stores, but allows the sale of alcohol in some restaurants with special permits.

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