Moving to Springdale, AR?
Here are the local rules you need to know before you unpack.
Every city has its own set of local ordinances that go beyond state and federal law. From when you can mow your lawn to whether you can park your RV in the driveway, these rules affect daily life in ways most people do not expect. This guide covers the key ordinances in Springdale across 29 categories and 100 specific rules we track.
🔊 Noise Ordinances
Noise rules affect everything from weekend parties to lawn care schedules. Quiet hours, construction restrictions, and barking dog limits vary widely between cities.
Quiet Hours
Some RestrictionsSpringdale codifies a property-line decibel scheme in Chapter 42 Article III (Noise) of the Code of Ordinances, adopted by Ord. No. 4496 on April 26, 2011 and amended by Ord. No. 4782 on April 8, 2014. Section 42-54 Table 1 sets 65 dBA in residential zones from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. and 60 dBA from 11:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m., measured at the property line.
Construction Hours
Some RestrictionsSpringdale Chapter 42 Article III Section 42-54(b) classifies construction sites as industrial zones for purposes of the property-line decibel scheme, giving them an 85 dBA daytime cap (7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.) and 80 dBA nighttime cap (11:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m.) measured at the property line. There is no clock-time construction ban. Section 42-54(d) authorizes the Chief Building Inspector to issue a 14-day emergency permit when public health and safety require exceeding the table.
Barking Dogs
Some RestrictionsSpringdale Code Section 42-51 expressly folds barking dogs into the 'noise disturbance' definition. Owning, keeping or harboring any animal that 'continuously, repeatedly, or persistently, without provocation by the complainant, creates a sound which unreasonably disturbs or interferes with the peace, comfort or repose of persons of ordinary sensibilities' is a per-se violation of Section 42-52, in addition to any Chapter 14 (Animals) provisions.
Leaf Blower Rules
Few RestrictionsSpringdale Chapter 42 Article III does not list leaf blowers, lawn mowers, or other yard equipment as a separate regulated category, and there is no gas-blower ban or hour-of-day equipment ban. Operators are bound only by the generally-applicable property-line decibel scheme in Section 42-54: 65 dBA daytime / 60 dBA nighttime in residential zones, measured at the property line, with the reasonable-person standard backstopping at any hour.
Amplified Music & Events
Some RestrictionsAmplified music in Springdale is regulated directly under Chapter 42 Article III. Section 42-51 includes a third prong of the 'noise disturbance' definition specifically for sound amplification devices - radios, stereos, boom boxes, loudspeakers, musical instruments and amplifiers. Section 42-54 Table 1 enforces 65 dBA daytime / 60 dBA nighttime residential property-line caps (75/70 commercial; 85/80 industrial).
Aircraft Noise
Few RestrictionsNorthwest Arkansas National Airport (XNA / KXNA) is located in Highfill, Benton County - roughly 10 nautical miles northwest of Springdale - and is operated by the Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport Authority on which the City of Springdale appoints board members. Federal law preempts local regulation of aircraft in flight under 49 U.S.C. Section 40103, so Springdale's Chapter 42 Article III cannot be applied to pilots, takeoffs, or approaches.
Vehicle Noise
Some RestrictionsVehicle noise in Springdale is reached by Chapter 42 Section 42-55, which bans (a) operating any sound amplification device from within a vehicle so that the sound is plainly audible at 30 feet or more from the vehicle, and (b) operating a compression-release engine brake (Jake brake) within city limits except in service-brake failure, adverse weather, or other emergency. A.C.A. Section 27-37-601 is the state muffler statute.
Industrial Noise
Some RestrictionsIndustrial property in Springdale carries the highest property-line decibel cap under Chapter 42 Section 42-54 Table 1: 85 dBA from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. and 80 dBA from 11:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. The ordinance enforces at BOTH the source property line AND the receiving property line, and when a sound source can be measured in more than one use district, the most restrictive limit applies at the district boundary.
🏠 Short-Term Rentals
If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.
Parking Rules
Some RestrictionsSpringdale does not impose STR-specific off-street parking minimums, but Arkansas Act 1023 of 2023 expressly allows cities to regulate parking at short-term rentals. STR hosts must satisfy the parking provisions of the Springdale zoning code for the underlying residential use and avoid parking on lawns, blocked sidewalks, or fire-lane violations.
Permit Requirements
Some RestrictionsSpringdale does not have a standalone short-term rental ordinance, and Arkansas Act 1023 of 2023 bars cities from prohibiting STRs outright. Hosts must comply with the Springdale business license requirement, zoning, and applicable health/safety/noise rules; the Code of Ordinances is hosted at library.municode.com/ar/springdale.
Noise Rules
Some RestrictionsShort-term rental hosts in Springdale are responsible for guest noise under the city's general noise and nuisance provisions in the Code of Ordinances. Arkansas Act 1023 of 2023 expressly preserves municipal authority to regulate noise at STRs, so loud parties and amplified sound that disturb neighbors trigger citations regardless of guest status.
Taxes & Fees
Heavy RestrictionsShort-term rental operators in Springdale collect stacked lodging taxes: the Arkansas 6.5% state sales tax (A.C.A. §26-52-301), the applicable Washington County or Benton County local sales tax, the City of Springdale local sales tax, and the Springdale Advertising and Promotion (A&P) tax under A.C.A. §26-75-602 et seq. Stays of 30 consecutive days or more to the same guest are generally exempt from the A&P tax.
Occupancy Limits
Some RestrictionsSpringdale has no STR-specific occupancy cap, but Arkansas Act 1023 of 2023 expressly authorizes cities to set health-and-safety-based occupancy limits at short-term rentals. Hosts must comply with the International Property Maintenance Code (IPMC) bedroom-occupancy standards adopted by the city and the underlying fire and building codes.
Insurance Requirements
Some RestrictionsSpringdale does not require a minimum STR liability insurance limit, but Arkansas Act 1023 of 2023 expressly authorizes cities to impose insurance requirements on short-term rentals. Hosts should carry commercial STR liability coverage (or rely on documented platform host-protection programs) because standard homeowners policies generally exclude business use.
🔥 Fire Regulations
Fire pit rules, fireworks restrictions, and brush clearance requirements are especially important if you are coming from a state with different fire risk profiles.
Fireworks
Some RestrictionsUnlike Fort Smith, Bentonville, and Rogers, Springdale permits consumer fireworks on private property between 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. on July 1 through July 4, with the property owner's consent. Aerial fireworks that travel on a stick (bottle rockets, sky rockets) are prohibited inside city limits. Authority derives from Arkansas Fireworks Law (A.C.A. Section 20-22-701 et seq.) and Section 20-22-708, which preserves municipal authority to regulate fireworks.
Fire Pit Rules
Some RestrictionsSpringdale (Washington and Benton Counties, population approximately 95,000) regulates residential fire pits and outdoor recreational fires through Chapter 46 (Fire Prevention and Protection) of the Springdale Municipal Code, which adopts the Arkansas Fire Prevention Code (2021 edition, based on the 2021 International Fire Code). Recreational fire devices must be at least 25 feet from any structure, no larger than 3 feet in diameter or 2 feet high, burn only seasoned wood, be continuously attended, and use a spark screen.
Brush Clearance
Some RestrictionsSpringdale does not have a California-style defensible-space program. Fire-fuel vegetation is controlled instead through the city's nuisance ordinance, which limits grass and weeds on residential property to 8 inches in height (clarified by city council in 2018) and 12 inches within 12 feet of property adjacent to a subdivision or road. Washington County's overall wildfire risk is rated low-to-moderate by the USDA Forest Service Wildfire Risk to Communities tool.
Outdoor Burning
Heavy RestrictionsOutdoor burning inside Springdale requires a burn permit issued by the Springdale Fire Marshal. The Springdale Fire Department applies a strict policy and has stated that no burning is allowed citywide even when Benton County drops its burn ban. Small recreational fires meeting the Arkansas Fire Prevention Code Section 307 rules are the only exception. Washington County frequently issues countywide burn bans (such as the December 2025 ban), during which all permits are suspended.
Wildfire Zones
Few RestrictionsSpringdale has no city-designated Wildfire Hazard Severity Zone. Arkansas has not adopted IFC Chapter 49 (Requirements for Wildland-Urban Interface Areas) or the International Wildland-Urban Interface Code at the state level, and Springdale has not adopted them locally. Washington and Benton County overall wildfire risk is rated low-to-moderate by the USDA Forest Service Wildfire Risk to Communities tool, although the surrounding Ozark National Forest and seasonal dry conditions trigger frequent county burn bans.
Propane Storage
Some RestrictionsPropane (LP-gas) storage in Springdale is governed by the Arkansas Fire Prevention Code 2021 Chapter 61 (Liquefied Petroleum Gases), adopted by reference in Chapter 46 of the Springdale Municipal Code. AFPC 6101.2 references NFPA 58 (Liquefied Petroleum Gas Code) for setbacks. Above-ground residential tanks up to 125 gallons water capacity must be at least 10 feet from any important building, and aggregate residential storage on R-3 (single-family) lots is capped at 500 pounds water capacity (about 125 gallons of propane).
🚗 Parking Rules
Parking rules catch more new residents off guard than almost any other ordinance. RV storage, overnight parking bans, and driveway regulations vary significantly.
RV & Boat Parking
Some RestrictionsRecreational and utility vehicle parking on residential lots in Springdale is governed by the residential parking and surfacing rules of Chapter 130, Article 7 (Off-Street Parking and Loading) of the Springdale Zoning Ordinance, which limits paved surface in a front yard to 40 percent of the total front-yard area on single-family and two-family lots, and by Chapter 114 (Traffic and Vehicles) of the Springdale Code for on-street RV and trailer parking. RV parks themselves are regulated as the C-7 Recreational Vehicle Park zoning district under Article 4.
Driveway Rules
Some RestrictionsDriveways and curb cuts in Springdale are governed by Chapter 110 (Streets, Sidewalks and Other Public Places) for work in the right-of-way and by Chapter 130, Article 7 (Off-Street Parking and Loading) for the access, dimensions and surface of driveways on the lot itself. Single-family and two-family residential lots are subject to a 40-percent front-yard paving cap, a durable-surface requirement, and access-drive minimums of 10 feet for dwellings under Article 7.
Commercial Vehicle Restrictions
Some RestrictionsCommercial vehicle parking in Springdale is governed by Chapter 114 (Traffic and Vehicles) of the Springdale Code, the Chapter 130 zoning rules that confine truck terminals and heavy-equipment storage to commercial and industrial districts (C-2/C-4/C-5, W-1, I-1/I-2/I-3), and the Arkansas state framework at A.C.A. §27-51-1301 et seq. Signed time limits and tow-away zones in downtown Springdale and on industrial corridors are enforced by the Springdale Police Department.
Overnight Parking
Some RestrictionsSpringdale does not impose a blanket citywide overnight parking ban on passenger vehicles, but overnight parking is subject to Chapter 114 (Traffic and Vehicles) of the Springdale Code, the 2015 three-hour-front-of-home rule on residential streets, signed tow-away and no-parking zones, the Article 7 surfacing rules for on-lot parking, and the Arkansas state framework at A.C.A. §27-51-1301 et seq. Removal of unattended vehicles follows A.C.A. §27-50-1201 et seq.
EV Charging
Few RestrictionsArkansas has not adopted a statewide EV-ready or EV Make-Ready building mandate, and the City of Springdale does not impose a city-specific EV-ready percentage on new construction through Chapter 130 (Zoning Ordinance) or Chapter 22 (Buildings). EV Supply Equipment (EVSE) is permitted as an accessory use under the underlying zoning district and requires an electrical permit under the Arkansas Fire Prevention Code framework (which adopts the IBC, IRC and NEC) and licensed-electrician installation.
Abandoned Vehicles
Heavy RestrictionsAbandoned and unattended vehicles in Springdale are removed under the Arkansas Code framework at A.C.A. §27-50-1201 through §27-50-1224 (Removal of Unattended or Abandoned Vehicles), with the 30-day-unattended definition of 'abandoned' supplied by A.C.A. §27-50-1101. The state recovery law at A.C.A. §27-49-219 (titling, sale and disposition of abandoned vehicles) backstops the process, and on-property junked or inoperable vehicles are enforced as nuisances under Chapter 74 of the Springdale Code by Springdale Neighborhood Services.
Street Parking Limits
Some RestrictionsOn-street parking in Springdale is governed by Chapter 114 (Traffic and Vehicles) of the Springdale Code together with the Arkansas state framework at A.C.A. §27-51-1301 et seq. A 2015 Springdale ordinance makes it unlawful, on complaint, to park a vehicle in front of a home owned by another person for more than three hours in any 24-hour period. Springdale does not operate downtown parking meters; signed time limits and tow-away zones are enforced by the Springdale Police Department.
🧱 Fence Regulations
Planning to put up a fence? Height limits, material restrictions, and permit requirements differ by city - and sometimes by which side of the property the fence sits on.
Permit Requirements
Some RestrictionsSpringdale fence installations are reviewed by the Building and Development Services Department under Chapter 22 (Building) and Chapter 130 (Zoning). A permit is generally required and must clear zoning height, sight-triangle, and floodplain checks before installation. Applications and questions go to 201 Spring Street or 479-756-8200.
Height Limits
Some RestrictionsSpringdale regulates fence height through Chapter 130 (Zoning Ordinance) by district rather than a single citywide cap. Industrial uses required to be enclosed (I-3 Sec. 4.5) and commercial sites adjacent to residential (Secs. 3.2-3.8) must install a six-foot opaque screen fence or wall. Specific residential height limits for front, side, and rear yards are set in Chapter 130 and should be verified with the Building Department.
Neighbor Fence Rules
Few RestrictionsSpringdale's Code of Ordinances does not require a neighbor's consent to install a fence on your own land. Boundary and partition-fence disputes between adjoining owners are handled under Arkansas state law (A.C.A. Title 2, Chapter 39) and the common law of property, not the City Code.
Approved Materials
Few RestrictionsSpringdale's Code of Ordinances does not publish a closed list of allowed residential fence materials. Wood, vinyl, ornamental metal, chain link, and masonry are generally permitted if Chapter 130 height and placement rules are met. Commercial sites adjacent to residential and I-3 industrial uses must use an opaque screen fence under Sections 3.2-3.8 and 4.5.
Pool Barriers
Heavy RestrictionsPools, hot tubs, and spas deeper than 24 inches in Springdale must be enclosed by a barrier under the city's Premises Maintenance Code (Chapter 91, Article III, Division 3) and the Arkansas adoption of the 2021 International Residential Code Chapter 42 (Appendix G) and 2021 International Swimming Pool & Spa Code. Barriers must be at least 48 inches high with self-closing, self-latching gates.
🐔 Animal Ordinances
Pet owners and aspiring chicken keepers should check local animal ordinances before signing a lease or closing on a home.
Chickens & Livestock
Heavy RestrictionsSpringdale regulates fowl and livestock under Chapter 14 (Animals) of the Springdale Municipal Code. The City prohibits any fowl, including chickens, from running at large within city limits. Chickens and other fowl are allowed only on properties located in the A-1 (Agricultural) zoning district under the Springdale Zoning Code at Chapter 130. A critical limitation applies: no fowl may be kept in a platted subdivision, even if that subdivision happens to be zoned A-1. Questions go to the Springdale Animal Services Division at (479) 750-8114.
Dog Leash Laws
Some RestrictionsSpringdale Municipal Code Chapter 14 (Animals) requires dogs to be under the physical control of a person when off the owner's property. Dogs running at large are subject to impoundment by Springdale Animal Services. A narrow exception in the Code allows dogs to run at large on the property of the animal's owner only where that property is located in a non-platted A-1 (Agricultural) zone. Every dog must be current on rabies vaccination under Arkansas Code Annotated Section 20-19-303. Springdale Animal Services is located at 1549 E. Don Tyson Parkway, (479) 750-8114.
Breed Restrictions
Some RestrictionsSpringdale has no breed-specific legislation. After publicly debating a pit bull regulation in 2013-2014, the Springdale City Council declined to enact a breed ban and instead strengthened its behavior-based vicious and potentially dangerous animal rules in Chapter 14 of the Springdale Municipal Code. Arkansas has no statewide preemption of breed-specific legislation - cities can still adopt breed restrictions - but as of 2026 Springdale regulates dogs by individual behavior. Owners of dogs adjudicated potentially dangerous must obtain an annual $100 permit, $50,000 liability insurance, and a microchip.
Beekeeping
Some RestrictionsSpringdale does not maintain a stand-alone beekeeping chapter. Apiaries are regulated through the Springdale Zoning Code at Chapter 130, which treats beekeeping as an agricultural use compatible with the A-1 (Agricultural) district, and through Chapter 14 (Animals) general nuisance provisions where hives create a nuisance. Statewide, the Arkansas Bee Law at Arkansas Code Annotated Sections 2-22-101 through 2-22-112 requires beekeepers to register their apiary locations with the Arkansas Department of Agriculture and prohibits establishing a new apiary within three miles of an existing registered apiary without consent.
Exotic Pets
Heavy RestrictionsSpringdale regulates exotic and wild animals through Chapter 14 (Animals) general restraint, nuisance, and vicious-animal provisions, and the Springdale Zoning Code does not list exotic species as a customary residential accessory use. Statewide, the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission Captive Wildlife Regulations at AGFC Code 09 control possession of native and most exotic wildlife. Arkansas Code Annotated Sections 20-19-501 through 20-19-511 (Ownership and Possession of Large Carnivores) make it unlawful to acquire any new large carnivore - including big cats, bears, and most non-human primates - and bar new large-carnivore permits since 2005.
Animal Hoarding
Heavy RestrictionsSpringdale addresses animal hoarding through Chapter 14 (Animals) nuisance and care provisions and through Arkansas state criminal cruelty statutes. Arkansas does not have a dedicated animal-hoarding criminal statute; hoarding conduct is prosecuted under Arkansas Code Annotated Section 5-62-103 (Cruelty to Animals - misdemeanor) and Section 5-62-104 (Aggravated Cruelty to a Dog, Cat, or Horse - Class D felony) where neglect rises to torture or causes serious injury or death. Springdale Animal Services investigates with the Springdale Police Department and refers cases to the Washington County Prosecuting Attorney.
Wildlife Feeding
Heavy RestrictionsSpringdale does not publish a stand-alone wildlife-feeding ordinance, but Chapter 14 (Animals) and Chapter 42 (Environment) general nuisance provisions allow Code Enforcement to cite residents whose feeding of deer, raccoons, or other wildlife creates a public-health or safety nuisance. The harder rule comes from the state: Washington County is inside the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) Management Zone, where AGFC Code 07.06 prohibits placing food, salt, minerals, or other attractants for wildlife except for specific deer-hunting baiting windows on private land.
Pet Limits
Some RestrictionsSpringdale Municipal Code Chapter 14 (Animals) does not publish a numeric cap on the total number of dogs or cats per household, and instead relies on rabies-vaccination, at-large, vicious-animal, and free-roaming-cat sterilization rules (including Section 14-37 requiring sterilization of free-roaming cats) plus general nuisance authority. Conditions that cross the line into neglect or hoarding escalate to charges under Arkansas Code Annotated Section 5-62-103 (Cruelty to Animals - Class A misdemeanor) and Section 5-62-104 (Aggravated Cruelty - Class D felony).
🌿 Landscaping Rules
From grass height limits to tree removal permits, landscaping rules can surprise new homeowners, especially in drought-prone areas with water restrictions.
Water Restrictions
Some RestrictionsSpringdale Water Utilities (526 Oak Ave, 'Providing safe, high-quality drinking water since 1919') is the city-operated water provider, drawing finished water from Beaver Water District, which treats Beaver Lake source water on behalf of Springdale, Fayetteville, Rogers, and Bentonville. Springdale Water Utilities promotes voluntary conservation year-round and may implement mandatory restrictions during drought or supply emergencies, coordinated through Beaver Water District protocols.
Grass Height Limits
Some RestrictionsGrass and weeds in the City of Springdale are regulated under the Springdale Code of Ordinances (nuisance provisions) and enforced by Neighborhood Services (479-750-8114). State authority flows from Arkansas Code A.C.A. §14-54-901 et seq. (municipal weed-abatement authority), which permits the City to order owners of lots to cut grass and weeds, give seven days' written notice, and if not abated, mow at the owner's expense and recover the cost as a lien on the property.
Tree Trimming
Few RestrictionsRoutine trimming of a wholly private tree in Springdale generally does not require a City permit. Trees in the public right-of-way and street easements are maintained by City Public Works and the Streets Department. Utility line clearance is handled by Carroll Electric Cooperative and Ozarks Electric Cooperative under easement authority. Arkansas common-law self-help allows trimming a neighbor's overhanging branches to the property line, subject to liability under A.C.A. §18-60-102 (timber trespass) and A.C.A. §5-38-101+ (criminal mischief).
Weed Ordinances
Some RestrictionsWeed control in Springdale operates at two levels. Locally, the Springdale Code of Ordinances enforces grass-and-weed nuisance abatement through Neighborhood Services with seven days' notice and lien authority under A.C.A. §14-54-901+. At the state level, the Arkansas Plant Act (A.C.A. §2-16-101+) and the Nursery Fraud Act (A.C.A. §2-21-101+) administered by the Arkansas State Plant Board declare noxious weeds and plant pests a public nuisance, with priority targets including Johnson grass, nut grass, and wild garlic.
Tree Removal & Heritage Trees
Few RestrictionsTree removal in Springdale is largely unregulated on private residential property. There is no general permit requirement to remove a tree on a private residential lot in Springdale. Public Works and the Streets Department handle trees in the City right-of-way and drainage easements. Dead or dying trees must be removed when ordered by Neighborhood Services as a nuisance under A.C.A. §14-54-901+. Land-development projects may face tree-protection conditions through Planning Commission site-plan review and AR DEQ stormwater rules.
Native Plants
Few RestrictionsSpringdale does not mandate native-plant landscaping on private residential property. The Arkansas Native Plant Society, the University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service (headquartered in nearby Fayetteville), and the Arkansas Department of Agriculture's Urban & Community Forestry program provide voluntary guidance for Ozark-region landscaping. A maintained native or pollinator-habitat planting is distinguishable from neglected vegetation under the nuisance grass-and-weed standard. Arkansas's Right to Farm Act (A.C.A. §2-4-101+) provides nuisance protection for established agricultural operations.
Composting
Few RestrictionsBackyard composting in Springdale is permitted and encouraged for residents. The City's Sanitation Department operates curbside yard-waste collection separate from regular refuse, with branch and limb size limits and a separate bulk-brush option. Open burning of leaves and brush is restricted under Arkansas DEQ Regulation 18 (Air Pollution Control Code) and Springdale Fire Department burn rules. The University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service in nearby Fayetteville publishes Ozark-region home composting guidance.
💼 Home Business
Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.
Zoning Restrictions
Some RestrictionsSpringdale regulates home occupations through the zoning code under authority of the Arkansas Local Planning Act at A.C.A. §14-56-416. Home occupations are typically permitted as accessory uses in residential districts subject to limits on the floor area devoted to the business, exterior changes to the dwelling, non-resident employees, customer traffic, signage, outdoor storage, and noise. Arkansas has no statewide home occupation preemption statute, so the precise standards (often categorized as customary home occupations permitted by right and major home occupations requiring special use permit) are set entirely by the Springdale zoning code. The Springdale Code on Municode is the controlling local source.
Signage Rules
Some RestrictionsSignage for home occupations in Springdale is governed by the sign regulations in the zoning code. Typical home occupation rules in Arkansas municipalities limit on-premises signs to one non-illuminated wall sign of small area (commonly 1 to 2 square feet) identifying the business. Major home occupations approved by special use permit may receive modest additional signage rights subject to the Sign Code. All sign regulations must be content-neutral under Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 576 U.S. 155 (2015); Springdale may regulate size, height, location, illumination, and duration but cannot impose different rules based on the message conveyed. The Springdale Code is hosted on Municode.
Customer Traffic Restrictions
Some RestrictionsSpringdale limits customer traffic to home occupations through the zoning code to preserve residential character. Typical Arkansas home-occupation rules cap daily customer visits (commonly 4 to 8 per day for customary home occupations), restrict client hours (often roughly 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.), require off-street parking for clients beyond a low threshold, and prohibit deliveries by tractor-trailer or other heavy commercial vehicles inconsistent with residential use. Major home occupations with significant customer traffic require special use permit approval from the Springdale Planning Commission with attached conditions. The Springdale Code is hosted on Municode.
🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas
Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.
Safety Rules
Heavy RestrictionsPools in Springdale must comply with the federal Virginia Graeme Baker Pool & Spa Safety Act (15 U.S.C. 8003) requiring anti-entrapment drain covers, the 2021 International Swimming Pool & Spa Code adopted by Arkansas (circulation, bonding, alarms), and the Arkansas Department of Health Rules and Regulations Pertaining to Swimming Pools (A.C.A. 20-30-103 et seq.) for public pools.
Pool Permits
Some RestrictionsSpringdale requires a building permit from the Building and Development Services Department for any swimming pool, hot tub, or spa deeper than 24 inches under Chapter 22 and the 2021 Arkansas Residential Code Chapter 42. Permits are issued at 201 Spring Street, 479-756-8200, and require site, barrier, plumbing, and electrical details.
Fencing Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsEvery pool, hot tub, or spa over 24 inches deep in Springdale must be enclosed by a barrier at least 48 inches high with self-closing, self-latching gates opening outward, under Springdale Chapter 91 Article III Division 3 and the Arkansas adoption of the 2021 IRC Appendix G and 2021 International Swimming Pool & Spa Code.
🏗️ Accessory Structures
Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.
Garage Conversions
Some RestrictionsConverting a Springdale garage into habitable space (a bedroom, in-law suite, home office, or ADU) requires both (1) zoning approval under the Springdale zoning code for the change of use, since the converted area no longer functions as accessory parking and may trigger off-street parking minimums or ADU classification; and (2) a building permit under the locally adopted International Residential Code. Conversions must meet IRC Chapter 3 requirements for habitable spaces including R310 emergency egress, R305 ceiling height, R314 smoke alarms, and R315 carbon monoxide alarms, and the zoning code's off-street parking minimums must still be satisfied after the garage is removed.
ADU Rules
Some RestrictionsSpringdale is a first-class city straddling Washington and Benton Counties in Northwest Arkansas (population approximately 84,000), regulating accessory dwelling units through its locally adopted zoning code. Arkansas has no statewide ADU preemption statute equivalent to California Government Code §66313 or Oregon ORS 197.312, so whether an ADU is permitted in Springdale is determined entirely by the local zoning ordinance under planning and zoning authority granted to Arkansas cities by A.C.A. §14-56-401 et seq. The Springdale code classifies dwelling units by district, and ADU permissibility (whether by right, by special use permit through the Planning Commission, or prohibited) depends on the underlying residential zone. The Springdale Code on Municode is the controlling local source: https://library.municode.com/ar/springdale.
Shed Rules
Some RestrictionsSheds and similar accessory structures in Springdale are regulated through two layers: (1) the Springdale zoning code, which sets dimensional standards by district (size, height, setbacks, lot coverage, location relative to the principal dwelling); and (2) the locally adopted International Residential Code, which under IRC R105.2 typically exempts one-story detached accessory structures of 200 square feet or less from building permit requirements but does not waive zoning compliance. Springdale property owners generally need a zoning permit from the Planning & Community Development Department even when no building permit is required. The Springdale Code is hosted on Municode at https://library.municode.com/ar/springdale.
ADU Permits
Some RestrictionsAn accessory dwelling unit in Springdale requires permits from two municipal tracks: a zoning permit or special use permit through the Planning & Community Development Department confirming the ADU is permitted in the district under the Springdale zoning code, and a building permit from the Springdale Building Official under the locally adopted International Residential Code for the construction itself. Arkansas has no statewide ADU preemption like California's SB 9 or Oregon's HB 2001, so timelines, fees, hearing requirements, and approval criteria are set entirely by Springdale pursuant to A.C.A. §14-56-401 et seq. and applicable local ordinances.
ADU Impact Fees
Few RestrictionsArkansas has not enacted a statewide impact fee enabling statute, and Arkansas cities have historically had limited authority to impose development impact fees outside of negotiated agreements. Springdale does not impose general development impact fees on residential construction; ADU applicants typically face only standard zoning permit fees, building permit fees under the locally adopted IRC, and utility connection (tap) fees through Springdale Water Utilities (water and sewer) and the appropriate gas and electric utilities. School districts in Arkansas have no impact-fee authority. Recreation, traffic, and park impact fees are not generally assessed by Springdale on infill ADU construction.
🍖 Outdoor Cooking
🌍 Environmental Rules
Stormwater Management
Some RestrictionsSpringdale Chapter 107 (Revised September 2017) governs stormwater discharges, illicit connections, grading, and erosion control under the city's NPDES Phase II MS4 permit administered through ADEQ Construction Permit ARR 150000. Any project disturbing 0.5 acre or more requires a city grading permit and an approved Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWP3).
Flood Zones
Heavy RestrictionsSpringdale Chapter 50 (Floods), Article II Flood Damage Prevention, regulates development inside FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas shown on the Washington County FIRMs effective May 16, 2008. New construction and substantial improvements must be elevated at least two feet above the Base Flood Elevation, and a Floodplain Development Permit is required from the Engineering Department before any work begins.
☀️ Solar Energy
🪧 Sign Regulations
🏚️ Property Maintenance
Trash Bin Storage
Some RestrictionsSpringdale's residential trash carts are 96-gallon poly-carts provided by the City's contracted hauler, CARDS Holdings (effective December 1, 2023). Carts are the property of CARDS Recycling and are bar-coded to each service address - they must remain at the address if the resident moves. One cart is included with City of Springdale water service for residences inside the city limits; additional carts must be requested directly from CARDS and incur an extra monthly fee. Carts must be at the curb by 6:00 a.m. on the collection day with clearance for the automated truck arm.
Property Blight
Heavy RestrictionsSpringdale enforces property-blight conditions through Code Enforcement (located at 201 Spring Street) using the City's nuisance framework in Code of Ordinances Chapter 42. When violations are observed, a Code Enforcement Officer posts a warning at the property giving the owner seven days to correct the problem. If the condition is not corrected, the City may abate it itself and charge the cost to the owner as a lien on the real property. State authority traces to A.C.A. §14-54-901 (municipal authority over unsanitary premises) and A.C.A. §14-54-903 (seven-day notice and city abatement).
Vacant Lot Maintenance
Heavy RestrictionsSpringdale caps weeds and plant growth at 12 inches in height within 12 feet of property adjacent to a subdivision or road, and requires owners or occupants to keep all fence rows within that 12-foot strip free of grass, weeds, and brush. Owners or occupants of property along a street or alley must also keep the right-of-way clear of tall grass, weeds, and debris. Code Enforcement leaves a warning at the property giving seven days to correct (A.C.A. §14-54-903); uncorrected violations are abated by the City at the owner's expense and lien-backed to the parcel under A.C.A. §14-54-904.
Snow & Sidewalk Clearing
Few RestrictionsSpringdale does not have a municipal ordinance imposing a duty on residential property owners or occupants to remove snow and ice from public sidewalks abutting their property. The City of Springdale operates a Snow and Ice Removal Program focused on clearing public streets and bridges - particularly priority routes - using the Street Department fleet. Arkansas common law follows the natural-accumulation rule: an abutting owner generally owes no duty to passersby to remove naturally-accumulated snow or ice from a public sidewalk and is not liable for slip-and-fall injuries from such conditions unless the owner created or aggravated the hazard or undertook clearing negligently.
🔑 Rental Property Rules
Rental Inspection Programs
Few RestrictionsSpringdale has no proactive rental inspection program. Inspections occur on a complaint basis through Code Enforcement applying the adopted International Property Maintenance Code, with fire-safety items enforced by the Springdale Fire Department.
Rental Registration
Few RestrictionsSpringdale has no general residential rental-registration ordinance. Owners follow standard Washington County property-tax assessment, City business-license rules if operating a rental business, and the City's adopted building and property-maintenance codes enforced by the Building and Code Enforcement Departments.
Rent Control
Few RestrictionsThe City of Springdale has no rent-control ordinance. Residential rent is governed by the Arkansas Residential Landlord-Tenant Act of 2007 (A.C.A. §18-17-101 et seq.) and the older landlord-tenant chapter (A.C.A. §18-16-101+), neither of which caps rent or limits increases.
Just Cause Eviction
Few RestrictionsSpringdale has no local just-cause eviction ordinance. Evictions are governed by Arkansas statute — the Unlawful Detainer Act (A.C.A. §18-60-301+), the URLTA (A.C.A. §18-17-901+), and the criminal failure-to-vacate statute (A.C.A. §18-16-101+). Filings go to Washington County District or Circuit Court.
Security Deposit Rules
Few RestrictionsSecurity deposits in Springdale follow Arkansas statute. A.C.A. §18-16-303 caps the deposit at two months' rent for landlords owning six or more rental units. A.C.A. §18-16-304 requires return, or written itemization of damages, within 60 days of the tenant vacating.
🗑️ Trash & Recycling
Pickup Rules & Schedules
Some RestrictionsSpringdale residential trash and recycling is collected weekly by CARDS Holdings under contract with the City of Springdale (effective December 1, 2023, replacing Waste Management). Springdale Water Utilities bills the service on the monthly water bill - $20.33 per month standard or $18.33 for seniors age 65+ as of February 1, 2026. Carts must be at the curb by 6:00 a.m. on the resident's assigned collection day. Service applies inside the Springdale city limits to single-family residences and multifamily buildings of up to four units. CARDS customer service: 479-435-9061 / cityofspringdale@cardsrecycling.com.
Bin Placement Rules
Some RestrictionsSpringdale carts must be placed at the curb (not in the street or on the sidewalk) by 6:00 a.m. on the resident's collection day with at least three feet of clearance on all sides so the CARDS automated truck arm can extend, lift, dump, and return. Carts cannot be blocked by parked vehicles, mailboxes, fire hydrants, overhanging tree limbs, or low-hanging power lines. Lids must be fully closed; carts may not be overfilled and items may not be placed on top of the lid because the dump cycle would spill loose material onto the curb.
Bulk Item Disposal
Some RestrictionsSpringdale's Bulky Waste Pick-Up Program is operated by the City's Public Works Department (not CARDS) and lets residents dispose of large items twice per calendar year per residence. Each pickup is capped at 8 cubic yards combined volume; the annual furniture limit is 4 mattresses or box springs and 2 couches per year. Accepted items include appliances (stoves, water heaters, washers, dryers, refrigerators and other cooling units), furniture, mattresses, construction materials, large tree limbs, and tires and rims. Schedule by calling Springdale City Hall at 479-750-8114 (Public Works).
Recycling Requirements
Few RestrictionsRecycling in Springdale is voluntary - Arkansas state law (A.C.A. §8-9-401 et seq., the Arkansas Solid Waste Management Act) authorizes but does not mandate municipal recycling. CARDS Holdings includes a weekly curbside recycling bin with the $20.33 monthly trash-and-recycling service for single-family homes and 1-4 unit buildings inside the city limits. The City also operates a drop-off recycling center at 1809 S Lowell Road (open Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.) that accepts a broader list including glass bottles and jars, household hazardous waste, and electronics. Recyclables must be placed loose - never bagged.
Yard Waste Collection
Some RestrictionsSpringdale's yard-waste program changed on December 1, 2023 when CARDS Holdings replaced Waste Management. The previous sticker-based yard-waste system was discontinued; CARDS now offers an optional municipal yard-waste cart at an additional monthly fee for residents who want curbside yard-waste service. Bagged yard waste is explicitly prohibited - the City's published rule is that 'bagged yard waste' is not collected at the curb. Tree cuttings must be unbagged and limited to 5 feet in length. Larger storm-cleanup branches go through the Bulky Waste Pick-Up Program. Open burning of yard waste is restricted by ADEQ Regulation No. 18.
Illegal Dumping
Heavy RestrictionsSpringdale prohibits illegal dumping of garbage, trash, leaves, grass clippings, and other refuse on public streets, sidewalks, alleys, and the property of another under Chapter 42 of the Code of Ordinances; the 2018 lawn-care ordinance update explicitly added that 'leaves, grass clippings and bulky waste can't be left on streets or sidewalks.' The Arkansas state-law backstop is A.C.A. §8-6-406 (Littering and commercial littering) with fines of $100-$1,000 plus mandatory community service - up to 8 hours for a first offense and up to 24 hours for second/subsequent. Larger-scale dumping is referred to ADEQ under A.C.A. §8-9-401 et seq. with civil penalties up to $10,000 per day per violation.
🚁 Drone Rules
🍔 Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors
Food Truck Permits
Some RestrictionsFood truck operators in Springdale need a Mobile Food Establishment permit from the Arkansas Department of Health under the Arkansas Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (A.C.A. §20-57-201 et seq.) and the Arkansas Retail Food Establishment regulations, a Springdale business license, a current food-protection-manager certification, and zoning compliance for each operating location.
Vending Zones
Some RestrictionsSpringdale regulates mobile food vendors through the Municipal Code business-licensing chapter and zoning rules, paired with Arkansas Department of Health licensing for mobile food units. Vendors need a City business license through the City Clerk and must avoid public right-of-way obstruction and prohibited residential zones.
🚪 Soliciting & Door-to-Door
🌙 Curfew Laws
📐 Building Setbacks & Zoning
Setback Rules
Some RestrictionsBuilding setbacks in Springdale are set by Chapter 130 (Zoning Ordinance) Article 4 (District Regulations) of the Springdale Code, which establishes the lot, yard and bulk standards by zoning district. The single-family residential districts SF-1 through SF-4 and the MF-2 through MF-24 multifamily districts share a 30-ft front, 8-ft side and 20-ft rear setback. Variance from the bulk standards is heard by the Springdale Board of Adjustment under the Arkansas zoning enabling authority at A.C.A. §14-56-422.
Structure Height Limits
Some RestrictionsBuilding height in Springdale is regulated by Chapter 130 (Zoning Ordinance) Article 4 (District Regulations), which caps residential structures in the SF-1 through SF-4 single-family, R-E Residential Estate and MF-2 through MF-4 multifamily districts at 35 feet. Commercial and industrial districts have no fixed numeric cap but require an additional 1 foot of setback per foot of height above 20 feet when abutting a residential district. The Arkansas Fire Prevention Code overlays IBC Chapter 5 height and area limits by construction type.
Lot Coverage Limits
Some RestrictionsLot coverage in Springdale is regulated by Chapter 130 (Zoning Ordinance) Article 4 (District Regulations), which caps building coverage at 40 percent of the lot in the SF-1 through SF-4 single-family and MF-2 through MF-24 multifamily districts and at 50 percent in the I-3 Planned Industrial district. Multifamily districts also require at least 10 percent landscaped open space. Stormwater impacts on larger projects are reviewed under Arkansas DEQ's NPDES Phase II MS4 framework when 1 acre or more is disturbed.
🌳 Tree Protection
Tree Removal Permits
Few RestrictionsSpringdale does not require a general tree-removal permit for trees on private residential property. The Springdale Public Works / Streets Department maintains and may remove trees in the City right-of-way and drainage easements. The City Code compels removal of dead or dying trees on order from Neighborhood Services under A.C.A. §14-54-901+. Land-development projects may require tree-protection or replacement plans through Springdale Planning Commission site-plan review.
Heritage & Protected Trees
Few RestrictionsSpringdale does not maintain a dedicated heritage-tree registry in its Municipal Code and does not require permits for removal of large or specimen trees on private property. Notable mature-tree resources include Springdale's municipal parks (Murphy Park, Luther George Park, Tyson Park, J.B. and Johnelle Hunt Family Park) and the Shiloh Cemetery historic district. Specimen trees on private property can be protected voluntarily through Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission conservation easements or through site-plan conditions through the Springdale Planning Commission.
Tree Replacement Requirements
Few RestrictionsSpringdale does not impose a citywide tree-replacement ratio on private residential tree removals. Replacement-planting obligations arise primarily through Springdale Planning Commission conditions on commercial, multifamily, and subdivision site plans, and through landscape-buffer standards in the zoning ordinance. The Arkansas Department of Agriculture's Urban & Community Forestry program provides technical assistance for replanting, including recommended species lists adapted to the USDA Zone 7a/7b Ozark Plateau climate of Washington and Benton counties.
🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales
Garage Sale Permits
Some RestrictionsSpringdale requires a permit for residential garage and yard sales, issued by the Springdale Building Department. The permit carries a $10 fee that the City Council voted to retain in March 2021 after a public debate. Each permit covers a maximum of two (2) consecutive days, and no new or used merchandise may be purchased or brought to the property specifically to sell at the sale. Sale signs must be on the seller's own property; signs on utility poles or in the public right-of-way are prohibited and removed by the City.
Frequency Limits
Some RestrictionsSpringdale limits each residence or dwelling to four (4) garage-sale permits per year, with each permit covering a maximum of two (2) consecutive days. The cap and duration are set in the Springdale garage-sale ordinance and administered by the Springdale Building Department alongside the $10 permit fee retained by the City Council in March 2021. Sales beyond the four-per-year cap can be cited as unpermitted commercial activity. Arkansas state law treats occasional household sales as exempt isolated sales under the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration sales-tax rules.
🔧 Building Safety
Pest Control
Some RestrictionsArkansas is the only U.S. state without an implied warranty of habitability, so Arkansas landlords have no automatic duty to exterminate rats, roaches, mice, bed bugs, or other pests unless the lease assigns that responsibility. Springdale enforces basic property-maintenance and nuisance standards through the International Property Maintenance Code and Chapter 42 of the Municipal Code, and pesticide applicators are licensed by the Arkansas State Plant Board.
Fire Sprinkler Requirements
Some RestrictionsArkansas amended IRC Section R313 to remove the statewide fire-sprinkler mandate for new one- and two-family dwellings and townhouses. Springdale has not imposed a local residential sprinkler mandate. Commercial, multifamily, and existing buildings undergoing significant renovation remain subject to the sprinkler triggers in IBC Chapter 9 and Arkansas Fire Prevention Code Section 903 as adopted in the 2021 Arkansas Fire Prevention Code through Chapter 46 of the Springdale Municipal Code.
Lead Paint
Some RestrictionsSpringdale does not have a stand-alone municipal lead ordinance. Lead hazards are governed by the federal Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act (Title X, 42 U.S.C. Section 4851) and EPA's Renovation, Repair and Painting Rule (40 CFR Part 745), and at the state level by the Arkansas Lead-Based Paint-Hazard Act of 2011 (A.C.A. Section 20-27-2501 et seq.) administered by the Arkansas Department of Health Lead-Based Paint Program.
📝 Permit Requirements
🏨 Hotels & Lodging
🏪 Business Licensing & Operations
Tobacco Retail License
Heavy RestrictionsTobacco retailers in Springdale are licensed by the Arkansas Tobacco Control Board under A.C.A. §5-78-101 et seq. and the Arkansas Tobacco Products Tax Act (A.C.A. §26-57-201 et seq.), which set the minimum sales age at 21. Retailers must hold a Springdale business license through the City Finance Department in addition to the state-issued tobacco permit; Springdale has not adopted a separate municipal tobacco license.
Secondhand Dealers
Heavy RestrictionsPawnshops in Springdale are licensed under the Arkansas Pawnshop Act (A.C.A. §18-27-101 et seq.), administered by the Arkansas State Board of Collection Agencies (Pawnbroker Division). Operators must post a surety bond, keep transaction records, and hold pledged or purchased property for a statutory holding period before resale. A Springdale business license is required in addition to the state pawnbroker license.
🚷 Public Conduct
Loud Party Ordinance
Some RestrictionsLoud parties in Springdale are handled through Chapter 42 Article III (noise), A.C.A. Section 5-71-207 (disorderly conduct), and A.C.A. Section 3-3-202 (furnishing alcohol to a minor). Springdale has not adopted a separate social-host or unruly-gathering ordinance, so the state framework governs. Penalties stack: the local noise fine ($150 to $250 first offense) plus state-court disorderly conduct and any underage-alcohol charge.
Outdoor Smoking Restrictions
Some RestrictionsSmoking in Springdale is governed mostly by the Arkansas Clean Indoor Air Act (A.C.A. §20-27-1801+), which restricts indoor public smoking statewide. Arkansas Act 488 of 2017 preempts most stricter local tobacco regulation, so Springdale cannot impose broad outdoor smoking bans on private property.
Overall: What to Expect in Springdale
Springdale has 100 ordinances on file across 29 categories. Of these, 22 are rated permissive, 61 moderate, and 17 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Springdale compared to other cities.
Rules can change, and enforcement varies. Always verify specific requirements with the city directly before making major decisions like building a fence, listing on Airbnb, or starting a home business.