Countrywide Process
July 14, 2025
Arkansas allows out‑of‑state subpoenas to be domesticated under UIDDA via Ark. R. Civ. P. 45.1. Submit your foreign subpoena and a matching Arkansas form to the circuit court clerk, pay the small issuance fee, and have it served under Rule 45—all without local counsel.
Arkansas adopted the Uniform Interstate Depositions and Discovery Act in 2018 via Ark. R. Civ. P. 45.1, enabling attorneys to easily domesticate and serve subpoenas in-state without motions or local counsel.
A subpoena issued by another state has no legal force in Arkansas unless domesticated. Under Rule 45.1, you can obtain an enforceable Arkansas subpoena with a simple clerical filing—no judge or hearing required. This ensures compliance with jurisdictional rules and allows enforcement and service in Arkansas according to local discovery law.
Need help with any of our services ? Contact Countrywide Process LLC now for expert assistance! Call 1-888.962.9696 or email us at info@countrywideprocess.com for a free quote today. Don’t wait— get the support you need now!
Click Here to Place Your Subpoena Order
Yes. Arkansas enacted UIDDA via Ark. R. Civ. P. 45.1 in 2018, streamlining out-of-state subpoena domestication.
No. Under Rule 45.1, you can file the foreign subpoena and Arkansas form with the circuit clerk without local counsel.
File with the circuit court clerk in the county where the witness or records are located.
Issuance fees typically range from $5–$30 depending on the county; service fees and witness fees are additional.
At least five business days in advance of a deposition, or two days prior to trial/hearing, per Rule 45.
Yes. A $30 per-day fee and $0.25 per mile must be tendered when serving a subpoena.
Deposition subpoenas, subpoenas duces tecum, inspection subpoenas, or any combination under UIDDA.
They have 10 days from service to file a written objection or motion to quash under Rule 45(e).
A non-party adult or licensed server, such as a sheriff’s deputy or private process server.
You may file a motion to enforce the subpoena in the circuit court where it was issued.