A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in St. Clair County, Illinois
St. Clair County is the southern anchor of Illinois’s Metro East, positioned directly across the Mississippi River from St. Louis and sharing with neighboring Madison County the fundamental dynamics of a bi-state metropolitan area. What distinguishes St. Clair County from its northern neighbor is Scott Air Force Base — one of the most significant military installations in the central United States, home to the United States Transportation Command and Air Mobility Command, and the single most powerful demand driver in the county’s rental market. For landlords who understand how to work with military tenants and navigate the federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, Scott AFB creates a demand base that is uniquely stable, income-verified, and resilient across economic cycles.
Scott Air Force Base: The Demand Anchor
Scott AFB is among the largest employers in southern Illinois, with a combined military and civilian workforce of approximately 14,000. The base hosts the United States Transportation Command — the entity responsible for all Department of Defense transportation, from troop movements to logistics — and Air Mobility Command, which operates the Air Force’s strategic airlift and refueling fleet. The mission concentration at Scott means the base is not likely to undergo the kind of realignment or closure that smaller or more specialized installations face, and the workforce it generates has been consistent and growing over multiple decades.
For landlords, Scott AFB creates a distinctive tenant segment: active duty military personnel and their families who need housing off-base, civilian employees in stable government positions, and defense contractors who support the base’s mission. The military tenant segment has specific characteristics that landlords serving this market must understand. Active duty personnel receive a Basic Allowance for Housing — a monthly payment that covers housing costs and is calculated based on rank, dependents, and location. BAH for the Scott AFB area is substantial enough to support market-rate rentals in O’Fallon, Shiloh, and Belleville, and military tenants who maximize their BAH typically present strong financial profiles as renters.
The most important legal concept for St. Clair County landlords who serve military tenants is the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act. Federal law requires that active duty personnel who receive permanent change of station orders or deployment orders of 90 days or more may terminate a residential lease by providing 30 days written notice after the next rent payment becomes due. Landlords cannot charge early termination fees, penalties, or retain security deposits as compensation for SCRA-based terminations. This creates a tenancy risk that does not exist in non-military markets — a tenant in good standing can legally vacate mid-lease — but the offset is that military income is federally guaranteed, BAH is specifically earmarked for housing, and the base’s assignment system creates consistent replacement demand when one tenant PCSs out.
O’Fallon, Shiloh, and the Base Communities
O’Fallon and Shiloh are the communities that most directly serve the Scott AFB housing market. Both have grown substantially over the past two decades as the base’s mission expanded, and both offer relatively new residential housing stock well-suited to military families. O’Fallon in particular has become one of the most desirable communities in the Metro East — its school district is consistently strong, its commercial infrastructure has grown to match its residential development, and its position between Scott AFB and the St. Louis metro area makes it attractive to both military and civilian professional households. Single-family home rentals in O’Fallon command meaningful premiums over comparable properties further from the base, and the vacancy rate for well-maintained properties in this community is lower than the county average.
Shiloh, immediately adjacent to the base’s main gate, is arguably the most direct beneficiary of Scott AFB’s housing demand. Properties within a short drive of the gate attract military families who prioritize commute time and on-base access. The community’s smaller size and more limited commercial infrastructure compared to O’Fallon means it functions primarily as a bedroom community for base personnel, with relatively few amenity draws of its own.
Belleville and the County Seat Market
Belleville, the county seat, is a well-established community of approximately 45,000 with a historic downtown, a community college, and a diverse economic base that includes healthcare, government, and retail employment alongside the defense sector. Scott Community College — technically Southwestern Illinois College — serves a commuter student population that generates modest rental demand from students and staff. Belleville’s rental market is broader and more economically diverse than the base-adjacent communities, serving a mix of military adjacent households, government employees, healthcare workers from Memorial Hospital Belleville, and the general working and middle-class population that comprises the bulk of any mid-sized Midwestern city’s rental market.
East St. Louis and Cahokia Heights
East St. Louis represents one of the most economically distressed communities in Illinois — a city that has faced severe population loss, infrastructure challenges, and municipal fiscal stress for decades. Cahokia Heights, formed from the consolidation of several smaller communities, shares some of these challenges. Landlords considering properties in these communities should understand that they are operating in high-challenge markets where active management, rigorous screening, and close attention to code compliance are not optional features of a management approach but baseline requirements for any investment strategy to function.
The Legal Framework
St. Clair County operates entirely under Illinois state law — no local RLTO, no just cause ordinance. The St. Clair County Circuit Court in Belleville processes eviction cases under the standard Illinois framework. Five-day notice for nonpayment, ten-day notice to cure for lease violations, then complaint and summons. Properly documented cases typically resolve within four to eight weeks. The most important legal supplement to standard Illinois practice in this county is the federal SCRA — not a local ordinance, but a federal statute that overrides any conflicting lease provision and must be understood by every landlord who rents to active duty military personnel.
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