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Arkansas Stone Supplier: Where to Source Building Stone in Hot Springs

Ty Woods
April 22, 2026
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Arkansas has some of the best natural stone in the country. Fieldstone, flagstone, sandstone, limestone, and decorative stone all come out of Arkansas quarries, and they move through supply chains that have been operating for generations. For contractors, builders, landscapers, and homeowners with serious projects, the question is not whether Arkansas stone is available. It is how to buy it directly, at the right price, with the right logistics to get it where it needs to go.

This guide walks through the Arkansas stone supply market, what separates a stone yard from a distributor from a marketplace, what contractors should expect when sourcing Arkansas stone, and how Rockhouse Stone operates across all three models at once.

The Arkansas stone market

Arkansas sits on geology that produces natural stone in commercial quantities. The Ouachita Mountains, which run through the center of the state and include the Hot Springs area, are known for fieldstone and flagstone. The limestone belts in the northern and western parts of the state produce construction limestone and decorative varieties. Sandstone and chopped stone are produced across multiple regions.

The supply chain has traditionally looked like this. Quarries produce the stone. Distributors buy in bulk and warehouse it. Stone yards stock a selection and sell to contractors and homeowners. Big-box retailers carry a narrow selection of common varieties. At each step, markups get added, logistics costs get layered in, and the connection between the person buying the stone and the quarry that produced it gets weaker.

A well-run modern supplier collapses that chain. It operates a real stone yard with actual inventory, it coordinates freight directly, and it connects buyers to quarry sources without unnecessary middlemen.

Stone yard, distributor, or marketplace?

When you search for Arkansas stone suppliers, you will find three different kinds of operations.

Traditional stone yards are physical locations with inventory in the yard. You drive to them, see the stone, and load it or arrange pickup. The strength is that you can see what you are buying. The weakness is that inventory is limited to what fits on the property, and logistics for jobs outside the local area can be tricky.

Regional distributors are bigger operations that warehouse bulk inventory and sell to contractors and smaller yards. They usually do not sell directly to homeowners, and their pricing is built around wholesale volume. Access often requires contractor credentials.

Marketplaces are newer. They connect buyers directly with quarries or multiple suppliers, handle logistics and freight, and offer a broader selection than any single physical yard can stock. The strength is selection and sourcing flexibility. The historical weakness has been the lack of a real physical presence or a real inventory to back up the online catalog.

The strongest suppliers today operate in more than one model. A real yard with physical inventory, combined with a marketplace that connects to outside quarries for stones not stocked locally, combined with freight coordination that can deliver anywhere. That combination gives buyers the best of each approach.

What contractors need from a stone supplier

For contractors sourcing Arkansas stone for projects, a few things matter most.

Consistent availability. Running out of stone mid-project is a serious problem. Suppliers with real inventory or reliable quarry relationships avoid this.

Contractor pricing. Trade accounts with verified pricing are the difference between a profitable job and a break-even one on stone-heavy projects. Suppliers that offer verified pro accounts typically carry trade pricing, trade credit, and net terms for qualified buyers.

Freight coordination. A pallet of stone weighs one to two tons. Getting it to a job site requires freight planning that most small yards cannot handle cleanly. Suppliers that coordinate freight as part of the order are a better fit for multi-site contractors.

Grade and type specificity. "Flagstone" covers a wide range. A supplier who can talk specifically about thickness, coloration, edge profile, and regional origin is a different supplier than one who sells "flagstone" as a single SKU.

Response time. Good contractors lose jobs to suppliers who do not return calls. A supplier with a real phone line that gets answered is worth more than a supplier with a slick website and a 48-hour email response.

What serious DIYers and homeowners need

The needs look slightly different on the homeowner side.

Ability to see the stone. Colors vary across quarry runs. A picture on a website is not the same as seeing the stone in person. A supplier with a real yard to walk is a serious advantage for homeowners choosing a stone.

Reasonable minimums. Commercial suppliers often have minimums that are far larger than a homeowner needs. A supplier that serves both contractors and homeowners will have options for smaller orders.

Help understanding what to buy. "I want stone that looks like the Arkansas Ozark style" is a reasonable starting point for a homeowner. A supplier who can take that starting point and translate it into specific product recommendations is doing real work that a pure online catalog cannot.

Delivery logistics for home projects. Freight to a residential driveway is a different conversation than freight to a commercial site. A supplier with experience coordinating residential deliveries makes the process smoother.

How Rockhouse Stone is structured

Rockhouse Stone operates as a hybrid: physical stone yard, marketplace, and freight coordinator.

The physical yard is in Hot Springs, Arkansas, operating on seven acres at 5643 HWY 7 N. The yard stocks Arkansas fieldstone, flagstone, limestone, chopped and cut stone, decorative stone, gravel, sand, and related landscape materials. Contractors and homeowners can visit, see inventory, and arrange local pickup.

Rockhouse Connect is the marketplace side of the business. It connects buyers across the country with quarry-listed stone, including stone types and varieties that are not always in the physical yard. The marketplace is designed to remove the traditional middlemen from stone sourcing, so a buyer anywhere in the country can access Arkansas stone through a single direct purchasing relationship.

Freight coordination is built into the operation. Whether a pallet needs to move to a job site in Arkansas, a residential address in Texas, or a commercial build in the Midwest, the shipping logistics are managed by Rockhouse rather than pushed onto the buyer.

Verified pro accounts are available for contractors. The accounts include trade pricing, net terms for qualified buyers, and tiered membership-style incentives for repeat and volume buyers.

The Bennett Brothers heritage

The physical yard in Hot Springs sits on ground that has been a stone operation since 1972. Rockhouse Stone Company owns Bennett Brothers of Hot Springs, the original yard that has operated at this location for more than 50 years. Bennett Brothers retains its own operation and brand separately, but the continuity of the yard goes back to 1972.

For contractors who have bought Arkansas stone for decades, the Bennett Brothers name is familiar. The heritage gives Rockhouse Stone a credibility anchor that a new online marketplace would not have. This is not a dot-com operation that started last year. It is a working yard with deep regional roots, layered with a modern marketplace and freight operation on top.

Pricing and transparency

Stone pricing varies by type, grade, quarry source, quantity, and freight. A reasonable Arkansas fieldstone price might range widely depending on what exactly is being bought. A flagstone price depends on thickness, coloration, and whether it is hand-picked or standard grade.

Any stone supplier worth working with will give a clear quote with the price, the freight, the timeline, and the payment terms in writing. A quote that is vague about any of those four things should prompt a second quote from a different supplier.

Rockhouse quotes are specific. Product, quantity, price per unit, freight, timeline, and payment terms are all in writing.

The decision

For contractors, builders, and homeowners looking for Arkansas stone suppliers, the question is whether you want a single-model supplier or a hybrid operation.

Single-model suppliers have their strengths. A local yard you trust is a relationship worth keeping. A regional distributor with the volume you need on one specific stone type is worth a call. A marketplace with a particular quarry relationship is worth checking for unusual stones.

For most contractors and serious DIYers, though, a hybrid operation covers more ground. A real yard to visit, a marketplace for sourcing what is not in stock, verified pro accounts for trade pricing, and built-in freight coordination is a more complete supply relationship than any single model alone.

Starting the conversation

Rockhouse Stone is at 5643 HWY 7 N, Hot Springs, AR. The phone is 501-532-1905 and the website is rockhousestone.com. Rockhouse Connect is accessible through the main site for out-of-region buyers.

For contractors interested in a verified pro account with trade pricing and net terms, the account team can walk through setup and eligibility. For homeowners planning a project, the yard welcomes visits during business hours and staff can help narrow the stone selection to what fits the project.