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Home » Blog » Bentonville & Centerton Building Pause — Sewer Capacity Crisis

Bentonville & Centerton Building Pause — Sewer Capacity Crisis

Phillip ShepardBy Phillip Shepard7 Mins Read

Bentonville and Centerton: No More Home Building…. (For Now)

Hello — I’m Philip Shepard with All Things Northwest Arkansas. I love this place (I moved here from Illinois and could’ve gone anywhere in the country), and I help people relocate to NWA every year. Today I want to give you a clear, no-nonsense update on why home building in parts of Bentonville and Centerton has largely stopped for the near future — and what it means for buyers, builders, and anyone keeping an eye on housing in Northwest Arkansas.

Quick summary: what’s the problem?

Short version: it’s a sewer and wastewater capacity issue. Both Bentonville and Centerton are running into limits on how much wastewater their systems can process. That has led to permit pushbacks, legal disputes, and an immediate tightening on large single-family residential development in certain areas.

Bentonville: why permits are getting pushed back

Over the past year or two I’ve watched builders get backed into corners by the city when trying to subdivide land and start large single-family projects. On the surface, it can look like planning policy — the city preferring townhouses, condos, and more walkable development — but beneath that is infrastructure stress: Bentonville’s sewer system is near capacity.

What that means in practice:

  • Applications for single-family subdivisions in some parts of Bentonville — especially the northeast and southeast sides — are getting delayed or denied.
  • Builders who expected to subdivide and build hundreds of homes have pushed back, and some have pursued legal action when approvals were denied.
  • The city is incentivizing higher-density product (townhomes and condos) in many places because it’s more efficient for wastewater infrastructure and better aligned with future planning goals.

There’s also a real financial side: fixing and expanding sewer capacity isn’t cheap. We’re talking about large infrastructure bonds or loans — my rough estimate, based on conversations and the scope of work, is the order of magnitude of tens to a few hundred million dollars to properly build out the system for long-term growth. That’s why, even when the issue is acknowledged, it takes time to solve.

Centerton: a dicey situation

Centerton’s issue is similar in cause but different in mechanics. For years Centerton has been sending its gray water to Decatur (Decatur processes and treats that wastewater). Recently Decatur reached capacity and told Centerton it could no longer accept more flow. So Centerton is left in a bind: continue sending wastewater to a partner that is full, or build its own treatment capacity.

Options on the table include:

  • Building a local wastewater treatment facility in Centerton (costly, time-consuming, and requires regulatory approvals).
  • Negotiating an expanded service agreement with Decatur — if Decatur is willing and able to grow its capacity.
  • Temporary moratoria or tight controls on new residential development until a solution is in place.

There’s no public, finalized fix yet. Centerton wants to grow (they even have downtown plans on the docket), but you can’t responsibly build a downtown or thousands of new homes without wastewater capacity. That means Centerton has to act sooner rather than later — I’d expect meaningful plans to be announced within the next year or two because they simply can’t keep growing without a solution.

What this means for housing in NWA

Here’s the practical impact for home buyers, developers, and the market:

  1. Fewer large single-family developments in affected areas. Expect the city and builders to focus on higher-density product (townhomes, condos, mixed-use), at least until infrastructure is expanded.
  2. When single-family is allowed, it will likely be pricier or on larger lots. If single-family housing returns in significant quantities, it will probably be more expensive: either luxury homes on acreage or smaller-scale developments where the infrastructure can justify it.
  3. Permitting timelines will be longer and less certain. Builders will face more hoops; buyers looking for new construction should expect delays and potentially higher prices tied to the cost of adding infrastructure.
  4. Investments in infrastructure will change the map. If the cities borrow to expand sewer capacity or secure funding from regional partners/foundations, that will unlock development in the long term — but not overnight. Some forecasts point to fixes being fully realized around 2029 for major projects.
  5. Townhomes and condos are the immediate winners. They’re more water- and land-efficient and align with the push for walkability and mixed-use neighborhoods.

How cities might pay for fixes

Typical routes for funding these infrastructure projects include municipal bonds, intergovernmental agreements, and sometimes philanthropy or public-private partnerships. There’s speculation that regional stakeholders (including large local philanthropies) may step in for targeted projects, but those arrangements aren’t always public or predictable.

Should you be worried as a homebuyer or seller?

Don’t panic. But be informed.

  • If you’re buying an existing home in Bentonville, Centerton, or surrounding towns — you likely won’t be affected by permit pauses on new construction.
  • If you want new construction, expect delays, possible price increases, and a greater chance you’ll see townhomes or condos rather than large single-family subdivisions in the near term.
  • If you’re a developer, budget for potential infrastructure costs and timeline uncertainty. Plan for higher-density product as a realistic alternative.

Local perspective: what I’ve observed

I noticed this trend on the ground talking to builders and going through permit conversations over the last couple of years. Sometimes the city’s pushback seemed policy-driven (favoring walkability and diverse housing forms), but the underlying driver was nearly always capacity limits in wastewater systems. The permit denials and delays are the symptom; the hard work ahead is fixing the pipes and treatment capacity so growth can continue sustainably.

“It’s a four-letter word and it’s not my favorite four-letter word: poop.” — a blunt way to say what’s really behind permit problems: wastewater management.

Resources I’ve created to help you explore NWA

If you’re thinking about moving to Northwest Arkansas, or visiting to see what it’s like, I’ve put together a few things that make exploring the area easier:

  • 3-Day Itineraries: Curated day-by-day plans for Foodies, Artists, Adventurers, Sports Enthusiasts, Sightseers, and Families with Kids.
  • Instant Home Updates: Faster-than-Zillow notifications for new listings in NWA — enter your criteria so you don’t miss homes for sale or rent.
  • NWA Starter Pack: A physical box I designed that includes a 120-page guide (schools, demographics, neighborhoods), itineraries, postcards, stickers, and yes — a coloring book. I’ll even ship it to your home.
  • Weekly “What’s Going On” Email: Every Friday I send a roundup of events, openings, and developments around NWA so you’ll never miss First Thursdays, downtown news, and community happenings.

Find these resources at allthingsnwa.com — they’re designed to help you decide if moving to or investing in Northwest Arkansas is right for you.

Bottom line

Infrastructure matters. Right now Bentonville and Centerton are bumping into wastewater capacity limits that have immediate consequences for new home construction. Builders are being pushed toward higher-density housing in many areas, and large single-family subdivisions will be rarer or more expensive until sewer capacity is expanded.

Solutions are possible, but they take time and money. Expect a multi-year horizon for big changes, and expect policy and market shifts (more condos, townhomes, and walkable development). If you’re planning to move here or build here, plan with those realities in mind — and reach out if you want help staying on top of listings, permits, and neighborhood updates in NWA.

Want help or more info?

Text or call me at 479-332-9631 or email philipp@allthingsnwa.com. If you’re relocating, download the 3-day itineraries or request the NWA Starter Pack at allthingsnwa.com — I’ll send you the materials and make sure you’re the most informed person when you get here.

See you around NWA.

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Phillip Shepard

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