A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Montgomery County, Missouri
Montgomery County occupies a distinctive position in Missouri’s geography — east-central, on the I-70 corridor, roughly equidistant between Columbia and St. Louis. Named for General Richard Montgomery, the Revolutionary War hero who died in the failed assault on Quebec City in 1775, the county was organized in 1818 and has a population of approximately 11,322 as of the 2020 census. Montgomery City, the county seat and largest community, sits directly on I-70, giving it highway access to both of Missouri’s largest population centers within a 90-minute drive. The county’s southern tier encompasses a portion of the Missouri Rhineland, where German immigrant communities established farms and river towns along the Missouri River in the mid-19th century. That heritage is visible today in Rhineland and Starkenburg, small riverside communities with distinctive Catholic churches and German-American cultural institutions that attract tourists on the Missouri Wine Trail.
The I-70 Commuter Dynamic
Montgomery County’s position exactly halfway between Columbia and St. Louis is its defining economic characteristic. Interstate 70 passes through Montgomery City, and this highway access shapes the county’s rental market in ways that a purely agricultural county would not experience. Some Montgomery County residents commute to Columbia (approximately 75 miles west) for employment at the University of Missouri, University Hospital, or the broader Columbia employment market. Others commute east toward the St. Louis metropolitan area — to communities like Warrenton, Wentzville, or even St. Charles for manufacturing and logistics employment. These commuter segments produce a rental market with more economically stable tenant candidates than the local agricultural base alone would generate.
Montgomery City itself has manufacturing, healthcare, retail, and government employment that provides local income. Jonesburg and High Hill, smaller communities along the I-70 corridor, serve the highway travel and local agricultural market. Wellsville, in the northern part of the county, has its own small agricultural service economy. The county’s poverty rate of approximately 11.8% is near the Missouri state average, reflecting a reasonably diversified employment picture.
The Missouri Rhineland: Heritage and Housing Character
The southern portion of Montgomery County along the Missouri River encompasses part of what is known as the Missouri Rhineland — a stretch of the river valley where German Catholic immigrants settled beginning in the 1830s and established communities that bore a distinctly European character. Rhineland and Starkenburg are the county’s Rhineland communities, each small but culturally significant. The Shrine of Our Lady of Sorrows at Starkenburg is a listed historic site. After the Great Flood of 1993, Rhineland residents used federal funds to relocate their homes approximately 1.5 miles inland from the river — a post-flood relocation that changed the town’s physical layout but preserved its community character.
For landlords, the Rhineland communities offer a niche market: tourists, wine trail visitors, and seasonal residents who may seek short-term or vacation rentals rather than conventional year-round tenancies. Conventional residential rental demand in these communities is thin given their small populations, but the tourism economy provides supplemental housing demand. Landlords renting in the Missouri wine country should ensure their lease agreements clearly address occupancy limits, guest policies, and property care expectations for any tenancy near high-traffic tourist destinations.
Graham Cave and County Heritage
Graham Cave State Park, near Montgomery City, is the site of one of Missouri’s most significant archaeological discoveries — a cave shelter with evidence of continuous human habitation dating back approximately 10,000 years. The cave and surrounding park attract visitors and contribute to the county’s modest tourism economy. For landlords, the park’s proximity to Montgomery City is relevant primarily as a quality-of-life amenity for tenants, not as a driver of rental demand.
The 12th Judicial Circuit
All Montgomery County evictions file with the 12th Judicial Circuit at the Montgomery County Courthouse, 211 E. Third Street, Suite 205, Montgomery City, MO 63361. Circuit Clerk: (573) 564-3357. Contact the clerk’s office directly to confirm current office hours before filing. The 12th Circuit also serves Audrain and Warren counties; Montgomery County matters file in Montgomery City. Missouri’s eviction procedure applies uniformly: for nonpayment, serve a written demand for rent immediately and file upon the tenant’s failure to pay or vacate; for lease violations, a 10-day notice to quit is required under RSMo Chapter 441. LLCs and business entities must retain a licensed Missouri attorney. Uncontested evictions in the 12th Circuit typically resolve in 25 to 50 days from filing.
Security deposits: Missouri has no cap. Return with an itemized statement within 30 days of move-out and key return per RSMo §535.300. Consistent move-in documentation is the landlord’s primary protection against deposit disputes. Montgomery County is a workable rural I-70 corridor market with genuine commuter rental demand and an interesting heritage character that distinguishes it from purely agricultural Missouri counties.
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