Arkansas Eviction Notice Forms

Last Updated: April 8, 2024 by Roberto Valenzuela

An Arkansas eviction notice form is a legal demand for a tenant to comply with the terms of the rental agreement or else move out of the premises. Arkansas landlords may deliver an eviction notice because of unpaid rent, lease violations, or illegal activity on the rental property.

Types of Arkansas Eviction Notice Forms

Notice Form Grounds Curable?
3 Day Notice To Quit Unpaid Rent (Civil Action) Maybe
10 Day Notice To Quit Unpaid Rent (Criminal Action) Maybe
Immediate Notice To Vacate Illegal Activity No
14 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate  Lease Violation Yes
30 Day Notice To Vacate Monthly / Yearly Lease No

Arkansas 3 Day Notice To Quit

Download: PDF | Word

An Arkansas 3 Day Notice To Quit evicts a tenant nonpayment of rent. In Arkansas, rent is past due five (5) calendar days after it is normally due. The tenant must pay the past due balance or move out within three (3) judicial days (i.e., not counting weekends and legal holidays) of receiving notice.

If the tenant does not move out of the rental unit on time, the landlord may pursue a civil eviction action for unpaid rent and possession of the premises.

Arkansas 10 Day Notice To Quit

Download: PDF | Word

An Arkansas 10 Day Notice To Quit is a criminal eviction action for nonpayment of rent. This notice applies when the tenant has not paid rent within the statutory five (5) calendar day grace period of the date rent is due. The tenant must pay the past due balance or move out within ten (10) judicial days (i.e., not counting weekends and legal holidays) of receiving notice.

A tenant with a past due balance who is still on the property at the end of the notice period is guilty of a misdemeanor and receives a daily fine upon conviction, with the amount determined by the court (between $1-$25/day). The court issues a judgment in favor of the tenant if there is nothing owed at the end of the notice period.

Arkansas Immediate Notice To Vacate

Download: PDF | Word

An Arkansas Immediate Notice To Vacate evicts a tenant for illegal activity on the premises. The tenant is not given an opportunity for corrective action, and must move out immediately upon receiving notice.

note
A landlord may serve this notice on a judicial day (a day when the courthouse is open), and begin eviction proceedings on the same day the notice is served, but this is not required by law.

Arkansas 14 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate

Download: PDF | Word

An Arkansas 14 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate demands correction of a lease violation that is “curable,” i.e., the tenant may get a chance to fix the situation rather than be evicted. A curable lease violation might include failure to maintain health and safety on the rental property, interfering with the quiet enjoyment of neighbors, or refusal to allow lawful entry by the landlord.

The tenant must take appropriate corrective action, or else move out within fourteen (14) calendar days of receiving notice.

Arkansas 30 Day Notice To Vacate

Download: PDF | Word

An Arkansas 30 Day Notice To Vacate terminates a rental agreement, including a month-to-month or year-to-year lease as well as an expired lease or a situation with no written lease where the tenant pays rent monthly. The non-terminating party must receive notice at least thirty (30) days before the date of termination.

How To Write an Eviction Notice in Arkansas      

To help ensure the legal compliance of an eviction notice:

  1. Use the tenant’s full name and address
  2. Specify the lease violation as well as any balance due
  3. Specify the date of termination
  4. Print name and sign the notice, including the landlord’s address of record
  5. Note the date and method of notice delivery, along with printed name and signature

It is easy to lose an otherwise justified legal action because of improper notice. Check carefully to ensure enough time after notice is delivered, not when it’s sent.

How To Calculate Expiration Date in Arkansas

The “clock” for an eviction notice period starts “ticking” the day after the notice gets delivered (served), except for an Immediate Notice To Vacate which takes effect as soon as it’s received by the tenant. For example, to give at least 30 days of notice and begin court action as of June 30th, delivery of the eviction notice must be no later than May 31st. 

In most jurisdictions, if the last day of a notice period is a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the notice period continues to run until the end of the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday. This is called the “next judicial day;” in other words, the next day a courthouse is open.

Arkansas counts only judicial days (i.e., no weekends or legal holidays) for notice periods of less than fourteen (14) days. Longer periods are counted normally.

How To Serve an Eviction Notice in Arkansas  

Arkansas landlords may deliver an initial written eviction notice by any method which effectively brings the information to the tenant’s attention. The law presumes the following methods are valid:

  1. Hand delivery to the tenant
  2. Delivery by registered or certified mail to the tenant’s address of record or (if unknown) last known residence

Proof of mailing does not prove the other party’s receipt of notice. To account for variable delivery times, mailed notice extends a notice period by three (3) calendar days.

    Read more

    Sources