
“To them it’s not about the sale, it’s about trying to help families move on. They treated me like I was their only client, and I had that one-on-one attention.”Read more
Charlisa Boyd
Sold to Opendoor in Raleigh, NC
Get an instant offer, choose your close date, skip repairs.

Skip the work with a cash offer from Opendoor.
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“To them it’s not about the sale, it’s about trying to help families move on. They treated me like I was their only client, and I had that one-on-one attention.”Read more
Charlisa Boyd
Sold to Opendoor in Raleigh, NC

“Opendoor’s offer came in right near our appraisal, but we never had to list the house or do showings. For the kind of value Opendoor gives you, it’s just a no-brainer.”Read more
Adam Leon
Sold to Opendoor in Phoenix, AZ
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Home Sale CalculatorArkansas sellers typically pay 8.78% of the sale price in total costs. Agent commissions average 5.66% (split between listing and buyer agents). Additional costs include the real property transfer tax (0.33% of sale price, seller pays), owner's title insurance (~$598), and recording fees (~$25). Total closing costs excluding commission average ~3.12%. See the full breakdown of how much it costs to sell a house.
Your net proceeds depend on your sale price, remaining mortgage balance, agent commission, closing costs, and any repairs. With the Zillow typical home value at $222,050 and total seller costs around 8.78%, most Arkansas sellers net approximately $200,000-$205,000 before mortgage payoff. Northwest Arkansas (Fayetteville area) sellers with higher-priced homes see proportionally larger gross proceeds. Use a home sale calculator to estimate your specific situation.
Cash buyers and iBuyers like Opendoor purchase homes across Arkansas - from Little Rock and Fayetteville to Fort Smith and Jonesboro - without repairs, showings, or financing contingencies. You get a firm offer, skip months of uncertainty, and choose a close date that works for your timeline.
Whether you need to sell in 14 days or 90, Opendoor gives you certainty on price and timeline - no agent commissions, no open houses, no last-minute buyer fallouts.
Ready to see what your Arkansas home is worth? Get a cash offer in 24 hours.
Opendoor's cash offer gives Arkansas sellers a straightforward alternative to the traditional listing process - no repairs required, no open houses, and no risk of a buyer's financing falling through.
No waiting, no contingencies, no surprises - just a predictable sale on your schedule.
Arkansas homes average 59 days on market statewide, with a sale-to-list ratio of 97.10% - sellers are leaving money on the table in negotiations and waiting months for results. Opendoor gives you a firm cash offer backed by current market data so you know exactly what you will net before you commit.
Northwest Arkansas is one of the fastest-growing real estate markets in the country. Bentonville and Fayetteville are booming thanks to Walmart's global headquarters, a thriving tech and startup ecosystem, and major corporate relocations - but even in a hot market, traditional sales take time. Opendoor lets sellers in Fayetteville, Bentonville, and Rogers capture their equity without repairs, staging, or uncertain timelines.
Close on your schedule, not the buyer's. Choose any date from 14 to 60 days out. Whether you are relocating from Little Rock for a new job, downsizing in Fayetteville, or liquidating an investment property in Fort Smith or Jonesboro, a predictable close date removes the biggest variable from your move.
Arkansas market at a glance (March 2026): Median sale price $271,300 | YoY change: +10.3% | Days on market: 59 days | Active listings: 13,102 | Months of supply: 5.48 months
Arkansas is in balanced-to-buyer's market territory. With 5.48 months of supply and a 97.10% sale-to-list price ratio, buyers have negotiating room and sellers must price realistically. The Zillow Home Value Index puts the typical Arkansas home value at $222,050, with the NeighborhoodScout statewide appreciation rate at +3.02% over the last 12 months - modest but positive underlying growth beneath seasonal price fluctuations.
Arkansas has four distinct economic anchors that drive housing demand. Northwest Arkansas is the standout growth engine: Walmart and Sam's Club are headquartered in Bentonville, drawing hundreds of supplier offices and tech companies to the region. Dillard's is headquartered in Little Rock, and Tyson Foods - the world's second-largest processor of chicken, beef, and pork - is based in Springdale. Agriculture underpins the entire state: Arkansas ranks #1 nationally in broiler chicken production and is a top producer of rice, soybeans, and cotton.
Higher education and tourism add stability. The University of Arkansas in Fayetteville anchors demand across Northwest Arkansas, while Arkansas State University does the same in Jonesboro. The Ozark Mountains, Buffalo National River (the first U.S. National River), and a growing outdoor recreation industry draw remote workers and retirees - creating new demand in smaller markets that previously lagged the national average.
Arkansas is a market of distinct submarkets. Northwest Arkansas (Fayetteville/Bentonville area) commands a $444,538 median price and +3.75% YoY growth - outperforming the state average significantly. Jonesboro is the next strongest at $263,751 and +5.2% YoY. Little Rock (-0.9% YoY) and Fort Smith (+1.8%) are lagging, meaning sellers in those markets face more buyer negotiating power.
Across the state, homes average 59 days on market before going under contract - plus 30-45 days to close. Sellers who price accurately and present their homes well move faster; those who overprice see extended DOM and eventual price reductions. If speed and certainty are priorities over maximizing list price, a cash offer eliminates the 59-day wait entirely and removes the risk of a buyer's financing falling through.