Lizards represent a diverse group, adapted to a wide variety of environments, and interact with a wide range of parasites. The composition of a parasitic community can be influenced by several factors, including the host, the environment, and the parasite itself. This study evaluated the composition of the helminth community in three species of lizards of the genera Ameiva, Ameivula, and Tropidurus, from a Carrasco habitat in Chapada do Araripe, Brazil. Carrasco is a little-explored environment in which the diversity of hosts and parasites is still poorly understood. The composition of the helminth community associated with lizard species was evaluated by comparing richness, evenness, dominance, and diversity among component communities, including host sex and size as influencing factors, using different statistical comparison tools. The community consisted of 12 taxa from eight genera of parasitic helminths, seven of which were Nematoda and one Cestoda. The factors analysed had different influences on the different parasitic communities of each host species. It was possible to determine the dissimilarity between host populations based on their parasitic communities, and it was observed that the host species itself represented the most important factor in the structuring of helminth communities. The information recorded here converges with other results obtained in different studies with lizards, but points to patterns in the helminth community that differ from those observed in other areas of the Caatinga. The results obtained reveal complex patterns of association between parasites and hosts, demonstrating the existence of ecological relationships that can be shaped by specific factors.