A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Morgan County, Missouri
Morgan County sits in central Missouri’s Ozark fringe, a 614-square-mile county organized January 5, 1833 from Cooper County and named for General Daniel Morgan, a hero of the Revolutionary War. With a 2020 census population of 21,006, the county has a character shaped by the intersection of agriculture, lakeside recreation, and small-town government. Versailles — pronounced locally as “vur-SAYLZ” rather than the French original — is the county seat, a compact town of approximately 2,539 whose courthouse square features a historic building designed with French-style mansard roofing in keeping with the Versailles name. That courthouse burned in 1887 but was rebuilt, and both the original site and the reconstructed courthouse are on the National Register of Historic Places.
Lake of the Ozarks and the Southern County Market
The Lake of the Ozarks touches Morgan County’s southern border, and the lakeside community of Laurie is the county’s primary lake-adjacent residential and tourist destination. As discussed in the Miller County guide, the Lake of the Ozarks economy is highly seasonal — spring, summer, and fall are high-activity periods for boating, tourism, and hospitality, while winter sees substantially reduced activity. Tenants employed in lake-dependent industries (marina workers, resort staff, restaurant and retail workers) may experience significant income variation between seasons. Landlords in Laurie and southern Morgan County should use prior-year tax returns as the primary income verification document, which captures annual income rather than peak-season earnings alone.
Harry S. Truman State Park, located along the western arm of the Lake of the Ozarks, provides camping, recreation, and scenic lake access within Morgan County. The park contributes to the county’s tourism profile and provides some seasonal employment for park and resort workers in its vicinity.
Versailles and the Inland Market
Versailles, away from the lake’s seasonal volatility, has a more stable economic character built on county government, healthcare, agriculture, and local services. Missouri Route 5 connects Versailles north approximately 17 miles to Tipton (in Moniteau County, part of the Jefferson City MSA) and south approximately 37 miles to Camdenton. This highway connection gives Versailles residents access to the Jefferson City employment market without the longer commute that more remote Ozark communities face. Government workers, healthcare employees, and agricultural service workers form the backbone of Versailles’ rental market and tend to be more financially stable tenants than tourism-sector workers.
Stover, in the western portion of the county, is a small agricultural service community with its own modest rental market. Florence, Barnett, and Clarksburg are smaller rural communities with minimal rental activity.
Historical Character: Jesse James, P.T. Barnum, and the Butterfield Mail
Versailles has a colorful historical footnote that landlords may find worth knowing when marketing properties to history-minded tenants or buyers: the Martin Hotel, established in 1853, was visited by both P.T. Barnum and Jesse James in the post-Civil War period. It is now a museum listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The county also played a role in the early American communications network — in 1858, the Mulhollen Station in the area was a mail stop on the newly established Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoach line. These historical threads give Versailles a distinctive character that distinguishes it from many similarly-sized Missouri county seats.
The 26th Judicial Circuit
All Morgan County evictions file with the 26th Judicial Circuit at the Morgan County Justice Center, 211 E. Newton Street, Versailles, MO 65084. Circuit Clerk Monica Cable: (573) 378-4413. Contact the clerk’s office directly to confirm current hours before filing. The 26th Circuit also serves Camden, Laclede, Miller, and Moniteau counties — five counties in all — with Morgan County matters filing in Versailles. Missouri’s eviction procedure applies uniformly: for nonpayment, serve a written demand for rent immediately; 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 26th Circuit typically resolve within 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. Morgan County offers a workable rural market with two distinct sub-markets — the lake-adjacent communities of the south and the more stable agricultural/government inland market around Versailles — each requiring landlords to calibrate their screening approach to the income profile of their specific tenant pool.
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