Arkansas Bankruptcy Exemptions
When a debtor files bankruptcy in Arkansas, the property they keep is decided by which exemption set they elect — and Arkansas is one of the minority of states that lets most filers choose between the federal exemptions and the state exemptions built on the Arkansas Constitution. That single choice reshapes what a creditor can reach. This guide breaks down both systems, the quirks of the constitutional homestead measured in acres, and how locating the debtor and their non-exempt assets is the practical work that turns a discharge into a recovery.
The Short Version
Arkansas debtors who have lived in the state long enough may choose between the federal bankruptcy exemptions in Title 11 of the U.S. Code and the Arkansas state exemptions rooted in Article 9 of the Arkansas Constitution — they cannot mix and match between the two sets. The headline state benefit is an unlimited-value homestead that is capped by acreage rather than dollars: roughly a quarter-acre in town or eighty acres in the country, fully protected regardless of how much equity sits inside it. The trade-off is that Arkansas’s personal-property allowances are small — a few hundred dollars beyond clothing — so many filers with little home equity pick the more generous federal set instead. For a creditor, the takeaway is that exempt does not mean invisible: non-exempt equity, recent transfers, and post-discharge assets are still reachable once the debtor is found. We are a public-records research firm; we locate the debtor and surface what is reachable. This is general legal information, not legal advice.
Watch: Arkansas Exemptions for Creditors
How the state-or-federal choice shapes what you can collect.
Watch Overview
The Arkansas Wrinkle: A Choice
State or federal — the election that decides what a creditor can reach.
Most states force their residents into one exemption system. Arkansas does not. It is one of a small group of “opt-out optional” states that let a qualifying debtor choose between the federal bankruptcy exemptions in 11 U.S.C. section 522(d) and the Arkansas state exemptions drawn from the Arkansas Constitution and the state code. To use the state set’s full homestead, the debtor generally must satisfy the federal residency requirement — broadly, having made Arkansas their domicile for the look-back period that bankruptcy law imposes on homestead claims. The debtor picks one system in full; the rules do not allow cherry-picking a generous homestead from one set and a fat wildcard from the other, and a married couple filing together must both use the same system.
That single decision is the most important Arkansas-specific fact for a creditor to understand, because the two systems protect very different things. The state system is built around land: its homestead has no dollar ceiling at all, but its personal-property allowances are some of the thinnest in the country. The federal system flips that — a meaningful but capped home-equity figure paired with far larger vehicle, household-goods, and wildcard numbers. Which set a debtor elects tells you immediately where to look for reachable value, so reading the schedules filed with the petition is the first move in any Arkansas collection.
Key Arkansas State Exemption Figures
The actual numbers, drawn from the Arkansas Constitution and code.
Homestead — unlimited value, limited by acres
This is the figure that makes Arkansas distinctive. Under Article 9 of the Arkansas Constitution, the homestead of a married person or head of a family is exempt with no cap on its dollar value — instead it is limited by area. Outside a city, town, or village, the rural homestead may run up to eighty acres with no value limit; if the parcel is larger, the exemption can stretch to as much as one hundred sixty acres, but only when the land between eighty and one hundred sixty acres is worth no more than twenty-five hundred dollars, and the homestead may never exceed one hundred sixty rural acres. Inside a city, town, or village, the urban homestead protects up to one-quarter acre with no value limit, expandable toward one full acre under the same twenty-five-hundred-dollar value condition, and capped at one acre. A married couple cannot double the homestead. The practical result: a paid-off Arkansas farmhouse on modest acreage can be entirely beyond a creditor’s reach no matter how much equity it holds.
The small personal-property alternative
Where the state homestead is generous, the state personal-property exemption is strikingly small. Article 9 protects, in addition to wearing apparel, personal property worth up to five hundred dollars for a married person or head of a family, and only up to two hundred dollars for a single person who is not the head of a household. These constitutional figures have not been raised in well over a century, which is precisely why many Arkansas filers with little home equity skip the state set entirely.
Vehicle, wildcard, wages, and tools
Arkansas’s statutory exemptions for filers electing the state set are equally modest. Motor-vehicle equity is exempt up to twelve hundred dollars. A wildcard runs to five hundred dollars for a married filer or head of household and two hundred dollars otherwise — the same figures as the constitutional personal-property allowance. Tools of a trade are exempt up to seven hundred fifty dollars. Sixty days of earned-but-unpaid wages are protected, and clothing and prescribed health aids are fully exempt. Tax-qualified retirement accounts are generally protected as well. None of these state numbers are large; together they are why the state set chiefly benefits land-rich, cash-poor debtors.
Arkansas State Set vs. Federal Set
The same debtor, two very different protection profiles.
| Exemption | Arkansas State Set (Art. 9 / Ark. Code) | Federal Set (11 U.S.C. 522(d)) |
|---|---|---|
| Homestead | Unlimited value; limited by acreage (about 1/4 acre urban / 80 acres rural, up to 1 acre / 160 acres in defined cases) | Capped at a fixed dollar figure (roughly thirty-one thousand dollars, inflation-adjusted) |
| Motor vehicle | Up to twelve hundred dollars equity | Several thousand dollars equity (inflation-adjusted) |
| Wildcard | Two hundred dollars single / five hundred dollars married or head of household | A base amount plus a large portion of any unused homestead |
| Household goods / personal property | Thin — a few hundred dollars beyond clothing | A meaningful per-item and aggregate allowance |
| Best fit | Land-rich debtor with substantial home equity | Renter or low-equity debtor with vehicles and personal property |
The federal figures are adjusted for inflation periodically, so a creditor should always confirm the current numbers rather than relying on a remembered amount; the U.S. Code section is the authoritative source. The point of the table is the shape, not the exact cents: a debtor who elects the state system is signaling that their value is in real estate, while a debtor who elects the federal system is usually protecting vehicles, accounts, and personal property instead.
What Exemptions Do Not Cover
Where reachable value survives a bankruptcy filing.
Non-Exempt Equity
Home equity beyond the elected homestead, a second vehicle, or land outside the acreage cap can be reachable through the trustee or post-discharge.
Recent Transfers
Property handed to relatives or shell entities before filing can be unwound as a fraudulent or preferential transfer when the paper trail is found.
Non-Dischargeable Debt
Support obligations, many tax debts, and debts from fraud or willful injury survive the discharge entirely and stay collectible.
Dismissed or Denied Cases
If a case is dismissed or the discharge is denied for non-disclosure, the debt is unaffected and the underlying assets remain in play.
Post-Discharge Assets
Wages, accounts, and property a non-dischargeable creditor can pursue acquired after the case do not carry the exemption shield.
Undisclosed Property
Assets the debtor failed to schedule are not exempt at all — you cannot exempt what you never listed, and locating them is the leverage.
Exemptions decide what a debtor keeps from creditors inside the case; they do not erase value that sits outside the elected set or debt the law refuses to discharge. The recurring problem for creditors is informational, not legal: you cannot evaluate non-exempt equity, challenge a suspicious transfer, or pursue a non-dischargeable debt against someone whose current address, employment, and holdings you cannot pin down. That is where a public-records locate does the practical work the statute leaves to you.
From Filing to Recovery
How we turn an exemption schedule into a collectible picture.
Send the Case Details
The debtor’s name, last known Arkansas address, the case or docket number, and whatever identifiers you hold become the starting point.
We Locate
A current address, employment, and known associates are rebuilt from public records and licensed databases, lawfully and for a permissible purpose.
We Surface Assets
Real property, business filings, vehicles, and recent transfers are mapped against the elected exemptions to flag reachable value.
You Act
Your attorney objects to an improper claim, pursues a transfer, or enforces a non-dischargeable debt with a verified, documented record.
Who We Help
We do the locate and the records work; your counsel does the law.
Creditors
Reachable assets identified
Collection Attorneys
Debtors and holdings located
Judgment Holders
Post-discharge enforcement
Trustees
Undisclosed property traced
Lenders
Collateral and equity checks
Support Recipients
Non-dischargeable claims
Whatever your role, the obstacle is the same: an exemption schedule on paper is not the same as knowing where the debtor lives, works, and holds value today. We deliver that picture through professional skip tracing and public-records research, then document it so your counsel can act. This page pairs with our guides on finding hidden assets and which assets can be seized to satisfy a judgment, and with neighboring state breakdowns like Oklahoma bankruptcy exemptions and Puerto Rico bankruptcy exemptions. We are a public-records research firm, not a law firm and not a credit-reporting agency — and for a legitimate matter, a verified locate typically comes back within 24 hours.
Our Commitment
We find the Arkansas debtor and surface the reachable value an exemption schedule leaves exposed — a verified current address, employment, and asset footprint, documented for your counsel. Lawful, permissible-purpose public-records research for creditors and their attorneys since 2004.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can an Arkansas debtor choose between federal and state bankruptcy exemptions?
Yes. Arkansas is one of the minority of states that lets a qualifying resident elect either the federal exemptions in 11 U.S.C. section 522(d) or the Arkansas state exemptions. The debtor must pick one system in full and cannot mix the two, and a married couple filing together must use the same system. This is general legal information, not legal advice.
How big is the Arkansas homestead exemption?
Under Article 9 of the Arkansas Constitution, the state homestead has no dollar limit but is capped by area: up to about one-quarter acre in a city, town, or village, or up to eighty acres in the country, fully protected regardless of equity. It can extend to one urban acre or one hundred sixty rural acres only when the extra land meets a low value condition. A married couple cannot double it.
Why is the Arkansas personal-property exemption so small?
The constitutional personal-property allowance is only five hundred dollars for a married person or head of family and two hundred dollars for a single person, beyond clothing, and those figures have not been raised in over a century. Because they are so thin, many low-equity Arkansas filers choose the more generous federal exemption set instead.
What is the Arkansas motor-vehicle exemption?
A debtor electing the Arkansas state set can exempt up to twelve hundred dollars of equity in a motor vehicle. The federal set protects substantially more vehicle equity, which is one reason a debtor with a financed or higher-value car often prefers the federal exemptions. Confirm current figures, as federal amounts adjust for inflation.
If a debt is discharged in Arkansas, is everything gone?
No. A discharge wipes out qualifying debts, but support obligations, many tax debts, and debts arising from fraud or willful injury are non-dischargeable and remain collectible. Property outside the elected exemptions, recent transfers, and assets the debtor failed to disclose can also remain reachable.
Can a creditor reach non-exempt assets after a bankruptcy?
Often yes. Equity above the homestead cap, a second vehicle, business interests, fraudulent transfers, and undisclosed property can be pursued through the trustee during the case or directly afterward on non-dischargeable debts. The practical barrier is usually finding the debtor and the assets, not the law itself.
Are you a law firm or a credit-reporting agency?
No to both. We are a public-records research firm. We locate debtors and identify reachable assets for creditors and their attorneys under permissible-purpose rules; we do not give legal advice and we are not a consumer-reporting agency. For legal strategy, consult a licensed Arkansas bankruptcy attorney.
How fast can you locate an Arkansas debtor, and what do you need?
For a legitimate matter, a verified locate typically comes back within 24 hours. Send whatever you have — the debtor’s name, last known address, the case or docket number, employer, or relatives — and we build the current address, employment, and asset picture from there.
Find the Debtor Behind the Filing
Arkansas exemptions decide what a debtor keeps — we find the debtor and the reachable value they expose, documented for your counsel, typically within 24 hours. Contact us to get started.
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