If you’ve been waiting for better local GMRS coverage in Northwest Arkansas, there’s good news: the Fayetteville GMRS repeater on 462.700 MHz is active again and already making a difference for local radio users.
For those of us in the area, this is more than just a technical update. It means stronger local communication for everyday radio users, outdoor enthusiasts, storm watchers, families, and anyone who likes having a dependable way to stay in touch across Fayetteville and beyond.
The Fayetteville Repeater Details
The repeater is currently being used locally with the following settings:
- Repeater name: Fayetteville 700
- Frequency: 462.700 MHz
- Repeater input: 467.700 MHz
- CTCSS tone: 141.3 Hz
- Status: Open
In my own testing, I’m getting full quieting on handheld radios from inside my house, which is a strong sign that this machine is providing very usable local coverage.
Why This Matters in Northwest Arkansas
GMRS repeaters can extend the range of handheld and mobile radios well beyond normal simplex communication. In a region like Northwest Arkansas, that matters.
Between hills, trees, neighborhoods, rural roads, and the mix of town and country around Fayetteville, direct radio-to-radio communication can be limited. A repeater helps bridge that gap by receiving your signal and retransmitting it from a better location.
That makes a repeater especially useful for:
- families traveling in separate vehicles
- off-road groups and trail riders
- campers and hikers
- neighborhood and local community communications
- storm spotting and severe weather awareness
- local hobbyists who want reliable regional coverage
A Strong Addition to the Local GMRS Network
The Fayetteville 700 repeater is especially important because it serves as a key connection point in the growing Northwest Arkansas GMRS scene.
Other repeaters in the regional network include systems in places like:
- Tontitown
- West Fork
- Lincoln
- Winslow
But for Fayetteville-area users, this repeater is shaping up to be one of the most important day-to-day local machines.
What You Need to Access It
To program a compatible GMRS radio for this repeater, you’ll generally need:
- Receive frequency: 462.700
- Transmit frequency: 467.700
- Tone in/out: 141.3 Hz
Many GMRS radios let you save this as a repeater channel for quick access.
If you’re new to GMRS, you’ll also need an FCC GMRS license to legally transmit. The good news is that one license covers your immediate family, and no exam is required.
GMRS Is Becoming More Useful in NWA
As more people in Northwest Arkansas discover GMRS, local repeaters like this one become even more valuable.
Unlike cell service, radio communication can still be useful in areas with weak coverage, during outdoor trips, at large events, or in situations where you simply want instant push-to-talk communication without depending on an app or network.
For many people, GMRS sits in a sweet spot between casual walkie-talkies and the more advanced world of amateur radio.
Final Thoughts
The return of the Fayetteville 700 repeater is great news for local radio users. If early performance is any sign, this tower is going to become a go-to option for Fayetteville-area GMRS operators.
If you’re in Northwest Arkansas and have a GMRS radio, now is a good time to program it in, test your coverage, and see how well it works from your area.
As local radio use continues to grow, this repeater could become one of the most useful communication tools in the region.








