Statute of limitations on debt in Arkansas

How long a debt collector can sue you in Arkansas, by debt type. The clock runs from your last payment or default. General information, not legal advice.

Written contract5 years
Credit card / open account3 years
Oral agreement3 years

Arkansas note: Credit-card classification is genuinely litigated (3 vs 5 years) and can turn on whether a signed agreement exists. (This figure is contested or recently changed — verify against the current statute.) Source: Ark. Code §16-56-111; §16-56-105.

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FAQ

How long can a debt collector sue you in Arkansas?

In Arkansas the statute of limitations is about 5 years for a written contract and 3 years for a credit-card or open account, measured from your last payment or default. After that a collector can no longer successfully sue you if you raise the statute of limitations as a defense.

Does paying old debt restart the clock in Arkansas?

In many states a payment or written acknowledgment can restart the limitations period, so do not pay or promise to pay a possibly time-barred debt before confirming its age and your state's rule.

Is a time-barred debt in Arkansas erased?

No — the debt still exists and can be reported or collected; the statute of limitations only removes the collector's ability to win a lawsuit over it if you raise the defense. It is separate from the roughly 7-year credit-reporting limit.