The Supply-Constrained Landlord Market: Investing in Andrew County, Missouri
Andrew County doesn’t announce itself. Unless you’re driving I-29 between St. Joseph and Maryville, you can live a long time in Missouri without ever having a reason to stop in Savannah. But for rental investors willing to look past the headline-friendly counties, Andrew offers one of the more quietly compelling setups in the state: high tenant creditworthiness, a strong commuter wage base pouring in from St. Joseph, and a rental inventory so tight that well-priced properties rarely sit vacant. The catch — and it’s a real catch — is that the same conditions that make Andrew attractive also make it difficult to buy into at reasonable numbers.
Why 76.7% Homeownership Is the Whole Story
Any meaningful discussion of the Andrew County rental market has to start with one statistic: the homeownership rate is 76.7%. Missouri’s statewide average is closer to 67%, and most rural counties fall into the 70–72% range. Andrew’s number is high even by rural-Missouri standards. That’s not an accident. The median household income in the county is roughly $75,625, which is substantially above the Missouri median of about $68,000 and far above most rural counties in the northwest quarter of the state.
Put those two numbers together — high income and high ownership — and you get a rental market that is structurally small. Roughly 23 percent of households rent, which on a base of 7,000 occupied housing units means something like 1,600 rental units countywide, heavily concentrated in Savannah and a handful in the smaller municipalities. By comparison, a similar-population county with 55% homeownership would have more than twice as many rental units to absorb demand.
The practical effect for landlords is straightforward: when a Savannah rental is priced reasonably and in reasonable condition, it rents. Vacancy periods measured in weeks rather than months are the norm. But the inventory is small enough that single-property data is unreliable, and a landlord trying to set rent by looking at three comparable listings on Zillow may be pricing against properties that are themselves mispriced because nobody has corrected the market in six months.
The St. Joseph Commuter Base Is the Demand Engine
Andrew County’s economy is not really an Andrew County economy. Roughly two-thirds of working residents commute to jobs in St. Joseph (15 to 25 minutes south via I-29) or, in smaller numbers, north to Maryville or south to the greater Kansas City metro. St. Joseph’s economic base — Mosaic Life Care and other healthcare employers, Tyson and other protein-processing facilities, distribution operations along I-29, and Missouri Western State University — directly determines Andrew County’s rental demand.
This has two important implications for landlords. First, tenant underwriting should anchor on the employer, not the county. If your applicant works at Mosaic Life Care, you’re underwriting Mosaic’s HR practices and payroll stability, not Andrew County’s general economic conditions. Second, exogenous events in St. Joseph — a major employer layoff, a plant closing, a hospital-system restructuring — will ripple into Andrew’s rental demand within a quarter or two. Landlords who watch St. Joseph news ahead of Savannah news will see shifts coming earlier than those who treat Andrew as a self-contained market.
The Acquisition Problem
The median property value in Andrew County was $215,400 in 2024, up nearly 10 percent from the prior year. In Savannah proper, the median is closer to $161,500 — reflecting older housing stock within the city limits versus newer construction in the unincorporated fringe. For an investor trying to build a portfolio, neither number is particularly forgiving on rent-to-price ratios.
A three-bedroom single-family rental in Savannah typically rents for $900 to $1,250 per month. Applied to a $160,000 acquisition price, the gross rent multiplier sits in the 135–180 range — not bad by metro standards, but thin by rural-Missouri standards where 100–120 is common. On a $215,000 newer-construction home, the ratios get uncomfortable fast. The investor math works on older Savannah inventory and on properties bought below market (estates, deferred-maintenance situations, relocations), but it does not work on MLS-listed newer homes competing against owner-occupant buyers.
The alternative acquisition strategy is to look at duplexes and small multi-family buildings, of which Andrew County has relatively few. When they come available, they tend to be priced opportunistically rather than by formula, which creates occasional windows for patient buyers.
Tenant Quality Is Genuinely Higher — Within Limits
Andrew County’s tenant applicant pool is, on average, higher-quality than you’ll find in most rural Missouri markets. The commuter demographic self-selects: if someone can hold down an hour of round-trip daily driving and a stable St. Joseph paycheck, they generally have the basic life logistics to pay rent on time. Credit scores, employment verification, and rental history all run stronger here than in lower-income rural counties.
But this can lull landlords into skipping screening steps, and that is the single biggest underwriting mistake in the Andrew County market. Two specific risk patterns show up repeatedly. First, recently-evicted Buchanan County tenants looking to relocate “out of the city” for a fresh start — meaning 15 miles up the road. Without a Case.net check, these applicants present very well on paper. Second, overextended commuter households where the commute itself is the early warning sign: someone moved to Andrew County specifically because they could no longer afford St. Joseph rent, which means they’re housing-cost stressed from day one and one flat tire away from late rent.
Case.net screening for prior Buchanan County eviction judgments takes about five minutes and costs nothing. Income verification against the employer (not just the pay stub) takes another ten. These two steps eliminate the majority of the preventable bad-debt risk in this market.
The 5th Circuit and the Practical Eviction Timeline
Andrew County evictions run through the 5th Judicial Circuit, shared with Buchanan County. Because Buchanan has much higher case volume, Andrew’s calendar moves relatively quickly on uncontested matters, but Andrew cases occasionally get bumped when St. Joseph calendar conflicts arise.
The courthouse at 411 Court Street keeps 8:00am to 4:30pm hours, and the civil docket is called Monday and Friday mornings. For filing-day planning purposes, this means a Monday filing is likely to reach the first available docket within three to four weeks if service goes smoothly. A Thursday or Friday filing effectively sits over the weekend and starts the clock the following Monday. E-filing through Case.net is strongly preferred.
For a straightforward rent-and-possession case with proper service, figure 25 to 50 days from the initial demand for rent to a writ of execution. Contested matters or cases requiring alternative service can add two to four weeks. Because Andrew is a small county, the clerk’s office tends to be approachable and responsive to pro se landlord filers who show up with complete paperwork — but anything less than complete paperwork will slow things down materially.
Who Should Invest in Andrew County?
Andrew County is a good fit for investors who value low-drama operation over high cash yields. The numbers don’t support aggressive cash-flow goals, but the combination of strong tenant quality, short vacancy periods, and a stable long-term commuter demand pattern makes it an effective slot in a diversified Missouri portfolio — particularly alongside Buchanan County holdings, where the economics flip (higher yield, higher turnover, higher screening friction).
Investors who rely on forced-appreciation strategies (BRRRR, major value-add renovations) will find fewer candidate properties than in larger markets simply because the inventory isn’t there. And investors trying to build scale quickly will hit a ceiling — Andrew County can reasonably support a portfolio of five to fifteen properties for a single operator, but not fifty.
For out-of-area buyers specifically: a local property manager is close to essential. Savannah is not a town where a remote landlord can reasonably DIY showings and maintenance, and the small community means word travels about landlords who let properties deteriorate or fail to respond to tenant issues. Reputation management in a market of 5,000 residents is a real operational factor.
The Long View
Andrew County’s demographic and economic trajectory is modestly positive. The county has not experienced significant population decline, unlike many rural northwest Missouri counties; it has held roughly steady at 17,000 to 18,000 residents for most of the past two decades. St. Joseph is not growing rapidly, but it is not imploding either, and I-29 corridor industrial development continues at a slow, steady pace. No single employer dominates to the degree that a Ford Kansas City Assembly shutdown would hit Clay County, which means Andrew’s tenant demand is structurally diversified.
For patient landlords with disciplined acquisition criteria, Andrew County rewards the slow approach. For investors looking to deploy capital quickly, the inventory simply won’t cooperate. Read the market for what it is and the economics work.
|