Arkansas tick risk, by town
A daily tick-risk score for all 500 Arkansas towns, grouped by their 75 counties. Tick risk is local, so pick your town for today's number, a 7-day outlook, and what's driving it.
What types of ticks live in Arkansas? See the identification chart →
What is alpha-gal syndrome? Symptoms and foods to avoid →
Arkansas County · 6 towns
Ashley County · 7 towns
Baxter County · 8 towns
Benton County · 18 towns
Boone County · 11 towns
Bradley County · 3 towns
Calhoun County · 4 towns
Carroll County · 7 towns
Chicot County · 3 towns
Clark County · 7 towns
Clay County · 12 towns
Cleburne County · 5 towns
Cleveland County · 2 towns
Columbia County · 5 towns
Conway County · 4 towns
Craighead County · 10 towns
Crawford County · 9 towns
Crittenden County · 13 towns
Cross County · 4 towns
Dallas County · 3 towns
Desha County · 6 towns
Drew County · 4 towns
Faulkner County · 10 towns
Franklin County · 6 towns
Fulton County · 3 towns
Garland County · 4 towns
Grant County · 5 towns
Greene County · 5 towns
Hempstead County · 10 towns
Hot Spring County · 6 towns
Howard County · 4 towns
Independence County · 9 towns
Izard County · 8 towns
Jackson County · 11 towns
Jefferson County · 6 towns
Johnson County · 5 towns
Lafayette County · 4 towns
Lawrence County · 13 towns
Lee County · 6 towns
Lincoln County · 3 towns
Little River County · 5 towns
Logan County · 9 towns
Lonoke County · 10 towns
Madison County · 3 towns
Marion County · 5 towns
Miller County · 3 towns
Mississippi County · 17 towns
Monroe County · 5 towns
Montgomery County · 4 towns
Nevada County · 7 towns
Newton County · 2 towns
Ouachita County · 6 towns
Perry County · 7 towns
Phillips County · 5 towns
Pike County · 5 towns
Poinsett County · 8 towns
Polk County · 6 towns
Pope County · 6 towns
Prairie County · 5 towns
Pulaski County · 7 towns
Randolph County · 6 towns
Saline County · 7 towns
Scott County · 1 towns
Searcy County · 5 towns
Sebastian County · 11 towns
Sevier County · 5 towns
Sharp County · 8 towns
St. Francis County · 8 towns
Stone County · 2 towns
Union County · 8 towns
Van Buren County · 4 towns
Washington County · 13 towns
White County · 16 towns
Woodruff County · 5 towns
Yell County · 7 towns
Arkansas tick questions
- What types of ticks live in Arkansas?
- Arkansas has five human-biting ticks: the lone star tick (established statewide, the state's most common human-biting tick and the main cause of alpha-gal syndrome), the Gulf Coast tick (reported), the American dog tick, the brown dog tick, and the deer tick (blacklegged tick), which carries Lyme disease but bites people far less often this far south. See the Arkansas tick identification chart for photos and how to tell them apart.
- When does tick season start and end in Arkansas?
- In Arkansas, ticks are active nearly year-round: the region rarely gets a hard freeze long enough to fully shut them down. The lone star tick ramps up earliest in spring, peaks in midsummer, and its larval "seed tick" swarms hit hardest in late summer. Adult ticks can still quest on mild winter days.
- When is flea and tick season?
- Flea and tick season generally runs from early spring through late fall, peaking in the warm summer months. In Arkansas, start prevention for pets and people in March and keep it up through November, since ticks can bite on any mild day.
- Which tick carries Lyme disease in Arkansas?
- The deer tick, also called the blacklegged tick, is the tick that spreads Lyme disease, but it is a minor factor in Arkansas. The lone star tick does not carry Lyme, but its bite causes alpha-gal syndrome, and it bites people far more often here than the deer tick does.
- Does Arkansas have lone star ticks that cause alpha-gal syndrome?
- Yes. The lone star tick is established across Arkansas and is the tick most responsible for human bites in the state. Its bite can trigger alpha-gal syndrome, a delayed allergy to red meat and other mammal products, along with ehrlichiosis and STARI.