A co-op association in Arkansas has to satisfy two things at once: the coverage architecture specific to co-op communities, and Arkansas's own statutory and lender-warrantability requirements.
The corporation owns the entire building under one blanket policy, and coverage is built around the proprietary lease rather than around individually owned real-property units.
Arkansas · Co-op
Arkansas Co-op Insurance
A co-op community in Arkansas sits at the intersection of two coverage questions. The first is structural to the association type: the corporation owns the entire building under one blanket policy, and coverage is built around the proprietary lease rather than around individually owned real-property units. The second is jurisdictional: Arkansas's statute, its lender-warrantability climate, and its market conditions shape how that program has to be sized, documented, and placed. This page covers both, and how they meet.
The coverage architecture
What drives a co-op master policy
A cooperative's insurance architecture starts from a legal structure that looks similar to a condo on the surface but is fundamentally different underneath: the co-op corporation owns the building and the land outright, and shareholders hold shares in the corporation plus a proprietary lease granting occupancy of a specific unit, rather than owning real property directly. That means there is no equivalent to a condo's bare-walls-versus-all-in valuation-basis question, because there is only one owner of the physical structure. The corporation's master property policy is a single blanket placement covering the entire building, and it is written to full replacement cost the same way a condo master policy is, but with no unit-boundary allocation problem to solve.
The proprietary lease is the document that does the allocation work a condo declaration does: it typically defines what the corporation is responsible for maintaining and insuring (the building structure and systems) versus what falls to the shareholder (interior finishes, fixtures, and improvements within the unit), and shareholders carry their own policy, sometimes called an HO-6 equivalent or a co-op unit-owner's policy, to cover that interior piece plus their personal property and liability. Because the corporation, not each shareholder, is the sole named insured on the building, a shareholder's ability to get her own interior coverage placed correctly depends on the proprietary lease language, and mismatches between what the lease assigns and what the master policy actually covers create the same kind of claim-time surprise a condo valuation-basis mismatch does.
Directors and officers liability protects the co-op board in a structure economically similar to a condo board but with sharper edges: the corporation's board makes decisions that affect shareholder equity directly (approving or denying share transfers, setting maintenance charges, enforcing proprietary lease terms), which generates a distinct flavor of governance dispute. A fidelity or crime bond covering the corporation's funds, maintenance charges, and reserves rounds out the program, sized the same way as any association's, against reserves on hand plus a set period of assessments or maintenance charges.
•Blanket master property policy covering the entire building under a single corporate ownership structure
•Allocation of responsibility between the corporation and the shareholder as defined by the proprietary lease, not a declaration
•Directors and officers liability for board decisions on share transfers, maintenance charges, and proprietary lease enforcement
•Fidelity/crime bond covering the corporation's maintenance-charge receipts and reserves
•Shareholder interior/unit coverage gaps where the proprietary lease and the master policy do not align on responsibility
•General liability for common areas and corporate operations across the entire building
Arkansas statutory backdrop
How Arkansas law shapes the program
The Arkansas Horizontal Property Act governs condominiums that elect it by recording a master deed. Its insurance provision, Arkansas Code Section 18-13-117 (Insurance generally), states that the co-owners may, upon resolution of a majority, insure the building against risk, without prejudice to each co-owner's right to insure his or her own apartment. That is permissive language. The Act does not require the association to carry property insurance and does not set any percentage of replacement cost or actual cash value as a floor. Sections 18-13-118 and 18-13-119 then address how insurance proceeds are applied to reconstruction and how co-owners share reconstruction costs when the building is uninsured or the indemnity is insufficient, which is precisely the exposure that opens up when coverage is thin.
Because there is no statutory percentage, the operative standard is whatever the declaration commits the association to carry, plus whatever a lender demands to keep units warrantable. The Fannie Mae Selling Guide (section B7-3) requires master coverage at 100 percent of replacement cost for a conventional loan, so in practice the lender bar becomes the real floor in Arkansas even though the statute names none. A board that reads only the statute and finds no requirement can be badly misled; the requirement lives in the governing documents and the loan file, not the code.
On the governance side, the Arkansas Volunteer Immunity Act, Arkansas Code Section 16-6-101 and following, extends broad civil-liability protection to qualified volunteers, and Arkansas is often described as among the least restrictive states on charitable and volunteer immunity. That protection is real but partial: it runs to the individual volunteer, not to the association entity, and it carries statutory exceptions, so adequate directors and officers coverage remains the practical backstop rather than something the immunity statute makes unnecessary.
For the full Arkansas picture, including reserve and inspection requirements and market commentary, see the Arkansas state page. For how co-op coverage is built regardless of state, see the Co-op practice page.
Load-bearing clauses
The clauses that decide a co-op claim
→Blanket master property policy, replacement cost, covering the entire corporately owned building
→Proprietary lease allocation of maintenance and insurance responsibility between corporation and shareholder
→Directors and officers liability for share-transfer, maintenance-charge, and lease-enforcement decisions
→Fidelity/crime bond sized to maintenance-charge receipts and reserves
→Shareholder-side interior/improvements coverage coordinated with the proprietary lease
How is co-op insurance different from condo insurance?
In a cooperative, the corporation owns the entire building and the land outright, and shareholders hold shares plus a proprietary lease granting occupancy of a unit, rather than owning individual real property. That means there is a single blanket master property policy on the whole building instead of a condo's bare-walls-versus-all-in valuation-basis question, and the proprietary lease, not a recorded declaration, is the document that allocates maintenance and insurance responsibility between the corporation and the shareholder.
Does a co-op shareholder need their own insurance policy if the corporation insures the whole building?
Yes. The corporation's blanket policy covers the building structure and systems, but the proprietary lease typically leaves interior finishes, fixtures, personal property, and personal liability to the shareholder. A shareholder's own policy needs to be scoped against what the proprietary lease actually assigns to them, since a mismatch between the lease language and the shareholder's policy is the same kind of gap a condo owner faces when their HO-6 does not match the master policy's valuation basis.
Free coverage review
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