Arkansas (AR) Trucking Compliance: Filings, Registrations & Permits
Arkansas-based motor carriers must keep their federal filings current (USDOT/MCS-150, UCR, IFTA, IRP, and Form 2290 HVUT) and handle apportioned registration, IFTA, and motor carrier permits through the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration (DFA). Arkansas has no separate weight-distance or highway-use tax, so IFTA fuel reporting plus standard registrations cover most carriers running through or based in the state.
Arkansas-specific requirements
What makes Arkansas relatively straightforward is what it does NOT have: unlike New York (NY HUT), Kentucky (KYU), New Mexico, and Oregon, Arkansas imposes no separate weight-distance or highway-use tax on top of IFTA, so there is no extra per-mile mileage tax return for Arkansas miles. A defining Arkansas detail is that IFTA, IRP, and most motor carrier credentials run through the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration (DFA) rather than a standalone DMV, while oversize/overweight routing is handled by ARDOT. Arkansas operates weigh stations and ports of entry on major corridors, and trucks are expected to stop as directed for weight, credential, and safety checks. Geographically, Arkansas borders six states (Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, and Oklahoma) and is a heavy through-traffic state for I-30, I-40, I-49, and I-55, so most Arkansas-based carriers run interstate and routinely cross into states that DO charge weight-distance taxes. If your routes touch Kentucky you'll owe the KYU weight-distance tax, if they touch New York the NY HUT, and New Mexico and Oregon have their own weight-distance programs as well, all separate from your Arkansas IFTA filing. Carriers running only occasionally through Arkansas without IRP or IFTA credentials can buy temporary trip and fuel permits instead of full registration.