The market runs through the Ozarks: Eureka Springs’ Victorian historic district, Hot Springs’ spa-town core, the Buffalo River and Bull Shoals cabin corridor, and the fast-growing Northwest Arkansas block of Bentonville, Rogers, and Fayetteville, where Crystal Bridges tourism and corporate travel produce unusually steady midweek demand.
The tornado corridor and the historic rebuildArkansas sits in Dixie Alley, and recurring spring tornado and wind activity defines the property underwriting, with deductible structures and roof condition deciding what gets paid. Eureka Springs adds a distinct exposure: hundreds of registered historic properties where a serious loss triggers Historic District review and modern-code rebuild costs well above pre-loss value.
Arkansas claims most often fail on wind deductibles and roof-condition limits after a storm, and in the historic towns on rebuild costs that outrun the policy because ordinance-or-law coverage was never added. Confirm your wind deductible in dollars, your roof terms, and, on a historic property, ordinance-or-law coverage sized to the district’s requirements.
Arkansas has no statewide STR registration; the state collects a 6.5 percent sales tax plus a 2 percent tourism tax and a 1 percent short-term rental tax, and the cities run the permits. Fayetteville splits rentals into owner-occupied and investment types, requires a business license, caps investment licenses citywide, and requires conditional-use permits in residential zones. Hot Springs licenses rentals with a Certificate of Occupancy inspection and caps residential-zone licenses at 400. Eureka Springs runs an active licensing framework tied to its historic district. Confirm the city’s cap and inspection rules before you buy.