Permit Required

How Arkansas's Burn Permit System Works

Arkansas's forests cover about half the state, making wildfire management a consistent priority for the Arkansas Forestry Commission. County rangers are active and know local conditions well. The permit system is informal and relationship-based — a quick call to your county ranger station gets you a permit number and practical local advice on whether conditions are suitable for burning that day.

Getting a Arkansas Burn Permit

DetailInformation
Permit AgencyArkansas Forestry Commission
Phone(501) 296-1940
Online Portalhttps://www.agriculture.arkansas.gov/arkansas-forestry-commission
CostFree
ValiditySame day

Seasonal Rules & Burn Bans

Spring (February–April) and fall (October–November) are peak fire risk periods. Summer is lower risk. Burn bans possible during extended drought in any season.

What You Can Burn in Arkansas

Natural vegetation, yard debris, agricultural crop residue. No prohibited materials. Timber and silvicultural burns have separate permit pathways for commercial forestry operations.

⚠ Never legal to burn — anywhere in Arkansas: Household garbage, treated or painted wood, tires, plastics, construction debris, or hazardous materials. No permit covers these materials.

Frequently Asked Questions — Arkansas

Call your county Arkansas Forestry Commission ranger station. They'll ask where you're burning, what you're burning, and current conditions. If appropriate, they'll issue a permit number over the phone. The full list of county contacts is at agriculture.arkansas.gov/forestry.

The AFC can require permits year-round but enforces most actively during spring (February–April) and fall (October–November) dry periods. Summer is generally lower-risk due to humidity. Always call your county ranger before burning.

No — standard AFC permit process applies to storm debris burning. Contact your county ranger station. After major storm events, rangers understand the urgency and may expedite permits and provide guidance on the fastest legal approach.

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only. Always verify current rules with Arkansas Forestry Commission before burning. Rules change and local ordinances may be more restrictive than state-level guidance.