A homestead or homestead estate generally includes a house, outbuildings, and the adjoining land owned and occupied by a person or family as a primary residence.
Many states—but not all—have laws that protect a person’s homestead from forced sale for the satisfaction (payment) of debts—at least up to a certain amount of the homestead’s value. These laws may be referred to as homestead exemptions or homestead laws and may be located in a state’s constitution or in its statutes.
The homestead exemption exists to provide a secure home for the family against creditors. The exemption is liberally construed to further its purposes. No specific writing is needed to claim a homestead exemption, but instead merely proof of concurrent usage and intent on the part of the owner to claim the land as a homestead.
In some states the constitutional family homestead exemption applies to the entire family, and not to either spouse individually. Therefore, so long as real property is a family homestead due to one spouse's intention and use, that property is protected by the homestead exemption, unless full abandonment has been pleaded and proved. Once a property has been established as a homestead, the property remains exempt unless it ceases to be a homestead due to abandonment, alienation, or death.
Abandonment of a homestead occurs when the homestead claimant ceases to use the property and intends not to use it as a home again. Anyone asserting abandonment of a homestead has the burden of proving it by competent evidence.
In Arkansas, the homestead exemption is a legal provision that protects a portion of a person's home and adjoining land from being sold to satisfy debts. This exemption is designed to ensure that individuals and their families have a secure place to live, even in the face of financial difficulties. Arkansas's homestead laws are found in the state's constitution and statutes. The state allows for an exemption of up to $800 in urban areas and up to 160 acres in rural areas for individuals, and these amounts can be doubled for married couples or heads of families. The exemption applies automatically—no specific writing is required to claim it, just proof of use and the intent to claim the property as a homestead. The exemption is broadly interpreted to support its purpose of providing family security. In Arkansas, the homestead remains exempt from forced sale by creditors unless it is abandoned, alienated, or upon the death of the owner. Abandonment is determined by a cessation of use and the intent not to return, and the burden of proof for abandonment lies with the party asserting it.