CareCam
One-party consent

Arkansas Daycare Camera Laws

By Jayesh Parayali, Founder, CareCam · 15+ years building daycare camera systems

Arkansas does not mandate daycare cameras, but licensed centers using them should disclose to parents. Arkansas is a one-party consent state; facility-held footage must be available to licensing staff on request.

Note: This is general educational information, not legal advice. Consult Arkansas DHS — Division of Child Care and Early Childhood Education (DCCECE) for regulations specific to your facility.

Want a compliant camera setup in Arkansas? CareCam is a video-only, parent-streaming daycare camera system — no audio (so the consent question never arises), enrollment-gated access, and center-controlled viewing hours.

Does Arkansas require cameras in daycares?

Arkansas has no mandate or right-to-install for daycare cameras. Audio recording is one-party. One conditional rule applies: under the Minimum Licensing Requirements, if a facility maintains continuous-monitoring video, those recordings must be available to licensing staff on request.

Audio recording in Arkansas: One-party consent

Arkansas is a one-party consent state for recording conversations. Even so, classroom audio is sensitive and rarely worth the exposure.

The simplest compliant default: video only

CareCam streams video with no microphone, which removes the audio-consent question in Arkansas (and every other state) entirely.

What Arkansas centers should disclose

Licensed Arkansas centers using cameras should disclose them to families in enrollment materials. Any continuous-monitoring footage the facility keeps must be available to licensing staff on request.

  • Whether cameras are in use in classrooms
  • Which areas are monitored
  • Who has access to footage
  • How long footage is retained
  • Whether parent access is available (and how to request it)

Where cameras can and cannot be placed

Permitted

  • Classrooms and learning areas
  • Hallways and common areas
  • Playgrounds and outdoor areas
  • Entryways and check-in areas
  • Infant/nap rooms (varies — check local rules)

Never permitted

  • Bathrooms
  • Dedicated changing rooms
  • Any area where children undress
  • Staff-only areas without notice

References & official sources

Verify current requirements directly — statutes and licensing rules change.

How CareCam keeps Arkansas centers compliant by design

  • Video only, no audio

    Removes the audio-consent question under Arkansas law and everywhere else.

  • Authenticated, enrollment-gated access

    Each parent sees only their own child's classroom — never other families' rooms.

  • Center-controlled hours

    Streaming is active only during the windows the director sets.

  • No parent footage archive

    Live-only streaming means no stored footage to manage or leak.

Looking at another state? See the full daycare camera laws by state guide.

Arkansas daycare camera FAQ

Are cameras in daycare classrooms legal in Arkansas?
Yes. Video cameras in daycare classrooms are legal in Arkansas, as in every US state. The limits are about audio recording, placement (never in bathrooms or changing areas), and disclosure to families. Always confirm current rules with Arkansas DHS — Division of Child Care and Early Childhood Education (DCCECE).
Can a Arkansas daycare record audio?
One-party consent. Even where Arkansas is a one-party consent state, classroom audio is sensitive — video-only streaming like CareCam keeps compliance simple.
Do Arkansas daycares have to tell parents about cameras?
Licensed Arkansas centers that use cameras are generally expected to disclose them to enrolled families, typically in the enrollment agreement, even where a separate statute does not spell it out.