A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Lewis County, Missouri
Lewis County occupies a narrow strip of northeastern Missouri along the west bank of the Mississippi River, a county of rolling farmland, small river towns, and a quiet character that has changed relatively little over the past century. Organized on January 2, 1833 from Marion County and named after Meriwether Lewis — co-commander of the Corps of Discovery and later the ill-fated Governor of the Missouri Territory — the county has always been oriented toward the river and the agricultural land surrounding it. Today, with a population of approximately 10,032, Lewis County is a small and modestly diversified rural market where the economic anchors of farming, government employment, and higher education sustain a functional if limited rental environment.
Canton and Culver-Stockton College: The Market Anchor
Canton is the largest community in Lewis County, with approximately 2,800 residents, and it is the county’s most significant rental market by a wide margin. Its position on the Mississippi River, its historic downtown, and most importantly its role as home to Culver–Stockton College all contribute to rental demand that Monticello and the county’s other small communities simply cannot match. Culver–Stockton is a private four-year liberal arts college affiliated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), enrolling several hundred students. The college is the single most important economic institution in Canton, providing employment for faculty and staff, creating demand for off-campus student housing, and driving foot traffic to local businesses.
For landlords in Canton, the college creates a bifurcated market. On one side are undergraduate students — typically 18 to 22 years old, often with no credit history, no prior rental record, and income that consists entirely of financial aid disbursements or parental support. These tenants are not inherently bad risks, but they require specific lease structures and screening approaches. Co-signers or guarantors — typically parents — are standard practice for undergraduate student rentals and should be required in writing as part of the lease agreement. Academic-year leases (August through May) are often more marketable near campus than full 12-month leases, and the summer vacancy this creates should be priced into the annual financial model. Student rentals also tend to see higher wear on properties, particularly in units shared by multiple occupants; a thorough move-in inspection with photographs and a signed checklist is especially important in this segment.
On the other side of Canton’s rental market are faculty, staff, administrators, and the various service-sector workers who support the college community. These tenants tend to be more financially stable, prefer longer-term arrangements, and are often willing to pay a modest premium for well-maintained units. Building relationships with Culver–Stockton’s human resources office or housing services can be a productive referral channel for this more reliable tenant segment.
La Grange and the River Towns
La Grange, a small Mississippi River town with approximately 796 residents, was one of the earliest settlements in the county and once served as a significant river port. Today it is a quiet community with modest rental demand driven by agricultural workers, retirees, and the occasional commuter to the Quincy, Illinois metropolitan area across the river. La Grange’s poverty rate runs approximately 14-15%, consistent with the county average, and its housing stock is predominantly older single-family homes with some multi-unit structures. Landlords in La Grange should be prepared for longer vacancy periods and should maintain units carefully to remain competitive in a market with very limited turnover.
The Quincy, Illinois connection is worth noting for any landlord in the eastern part of Lewis County. Quincy is a city of approximately 40,000 across the Mississippi in Adams County, Illinois, and it represents a meaningfully larger employment center than anything in Lewis County itself. Some Lewis County residents commute to Quincy for work at its hospitals, manufacturing facilities, and retail sector. These cross-river commuters can be stable tenants with solid employment incomes, though their housing decisions are sensitive to fuel costs and bridge conditions. The Canton Bridge connecting Canton to Illinois is the primary crossing point and its operational status directly affects the commuter market.
Monticello and the County Seat Market
Monticello, the county seat, is a very small community — well under 1,000 residents — whose rental market is sustained almost entirely by county government employment and related services. As the location of the Lewis County Courthouse, county offices, and the local school district administration, Monticello generates demand from county employees, courthouse-adjacent workers, and the occasional attorney or professional who needs to be near the county seat. This is a thin but stable market. The Lewis County Courthouse itself, dating to 1875, is one of the oldest courthouses in continuous active use in Missouri — a distinction that speaks to the county’s historical continuity and its modest pace of change.
The 2nd Judicial Circuit and Eviction Procedure
All Lewis County evictions file with the 2nd Judicial Circuit at the Lewis County Courthouse, 100 E. Lafayette, Monticello, MO 63457. Circuit Clerk: (573) 767-5352. Court hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Note that county offices including the clerk’s office observe a midday break from noon to 1:00 p.m.; plan courthouse visits accordingly. The 2nd Circuit is presided over by Judge Matthew Wilson and also serves Adair and Knox counties; all Lewis County matters file in Monticello.
Missouri’s eviction law applies without local modification throughout Lewis County. For nonpayment of rent, no statutory minimum notice period is required — a landlord may serve an immediate written demand for rent and proceed to file upon the tenant’s failure to pay or vacate. For lease violations other than nonpayment, a 10-day notice to quit is required under RSMo Chapter 441. Serve all notices by a documentable method: personal service with a contemporaneous affidavit, certified mail with return receipt, or posting on the door with a signed affidavit of posting. In a county of Lewis County’s size, the circuit clerk’s office is a small operation; arriving with complete and correctly formatted paperwork will streamline the process. LLCs and other business entities must retain a licensed Missouri attorney for all proceedings. Individual landlords may appear pro se. Uncontested evictions in Lewis County typically resolve in 20 to 45 days from filing, benefiting from a lighter docket in a low-population circuit.
Income Verification and the Rural Economic Reality
Lewis County’s poverty rate of approximately 14.5 to 16% is elevated relative to the Missouri state average and reflects the county’s predominantly rural and agricultural economic base. Median household income in the county runs in the range of $30,000 to $35,000 historically, though more recent estimates suggest some improvement. The practical implication for landlords is familiar: verify income on every application using pay stubs, bank statements, or tax returns, and apply the three-times-monthly-rent standard consistently. For agricultural workers with seasonal income patterns, review annual income through tax returns rather than relying solely on recent pay stubs. For college students, verify the co-signer’s income rather than the student’s financial aid award, which is not guaranteed income in the conventional sense.
Background and credit checks should be conducted for all applicants and evaluated consistently. In small communities where landlords may know applicants personally, the temptation to bypass formal screening is real but should be resisted — both for fair housing compliance and for practical risk management. The applicant a landlord knows socially is not necessarily a better rental risk than one who is a stranger.
Security Deposits and Documentation
Missouri imposes no cap on security deposit amounts. In Lewis County’s market, where rents are modest, collecting one month’s rent as a security deposit is standard practice. For college student rentals in Canton, some landlords collect up to two months’ deposit (or the equivalent from the co-signer) to account for higher expected wear. Whatever amount is collected must be returned with an itemized written statement of deductions within 30 days of the tenant vacating and returning keys, per RSMo §535.300. Document the unit’s condition at move-in with dated photographs, a detailed written inspection form signed by the tenant, and retention of all records for at least one year after the tenancy ends.
Lewis County offers a niche but functional rental market for landlords with realistic expectations and strong local knowledge. The Culver-Stockton College connection in Canton, the cross-river commuter dynamic near La Grange, and the county government employment base in Monticello each create stable segments of demand that sustain consistent if modest rental activity across the county.
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