Dallas County Rentals: A Springfield Exurb With the Largest Kauffman Amish Mennonite Community in the Country
Dallas County is part of the Springfield Metropolitan Statistical Area, which on paper puts it in the same category as Christian and Greene counties. In practice, Dallas feels much more like the northern Ozarks than the southern Springfield suburbs. Buffalo, the county seat, sits forty miles north of downtown Springfield on US-65 — close enough for a committed commuter, far enough that most Dallas County residents are not commuters. The county spreads across 543 square miles of rolling hills and agricultural land, with a population of about 17,000 that is 100% classified as rural. What makes Dallas distinctive, and genuinely unlike any other Missouri county, is the Kauffman Amish Mennonite community that has settled in and around Buffalo: roughly 950 adherents who preserve Pennsylvania German as their everyday language and represent the largest concentration of this conservative plain community in the United States.
What the Plain Community Means for the Rental Market
The Kauffman Amish Mennonites in Dallas County largely own their own homes and farms. They are not a significant share of the rental-tenant pool because plain communities conventionally prefer ownership, multigenerational households, and self-built housing that reflects specific religious practices. That said, the community’s presence shapes the broader Dallas County rental market in indirect ways that matter for an operator.
First, the Amish/Mennonite presence supports a layer of secondary businesses — sawmills, bulk food stores, horse-and-buggy supply, custom craft operations — that employ both community members and outside workforce. Those businesses create rental demand from non-Amish workers who staff adjacent retail and service operations. Second, the community’s visible presence has become a modest tourism draw: visitors coming through Buffalo to see the plain community patronize restaurants, gas stations, convenience retail, and occasional bed-and-breakfast operations, supporting the hospitality-sector workforce. Third, the cultural tone of the county — conservative, family-oriented, low-crime, traditional — tends to attract other conservative and traditional families as residents, shaping the general character of the non-Amish rental pool.
Occasionally a landlord will receive a rental application from a member of the Amish/Mennonite community, typically a young family in transition or an individual whose housing circumstances have temporarily changed. These applications should be treated with standard screening, but landlords should be prepared for specific utility and lease accommodations. Plain-community tenants commonly prefer units without required residential electric service, without cable and internet, and with specific heating and cooking arrangements compatible with their practices. Fair-housing laws apply normally; accommodations for specific utility configurations are generally compatible with standard leasing.
Buffalo and the US-65 Corridor
Buffalo is the county’s only substantial population center and the only community with a meaningful rental market. The city sits directly on US-65, with easy access north toward Lake of the Ozarks and south toward Springfield. Buffalo’s economic base includes the school district (Dallas County R-I), a handful of small manufacturers, regional retail centered around the US-65 corridor, a modest medical presence, and the service sector supporting both permanent residents and travelers on US-65.
Rental inventory in Buffalo is modest in absolute terms but the deepest in the county. Single-family homes typically rent in the $600 to $950 range, with mobile home and small-lot inventory available at lower rent points. Acquisition prices range from $60,000 to $150,000 for serviceable single-family homes, with mobile homes significantly less. Rental demand comes from school and small-manufacturing employees, retail and service workers, and a modest layer of Springfield commuters who trade thirty-plus-minute drives for meaningfully lower rents than Christian or Greene County offer.
The Springfield Commuter Question
Dallas County’s Springfield MSA designation is more marketing than daily reality for most residents. The 40-mile US-65 commute to Springfield runs through rolling Ozark terrain, which in good weather takes about 45 to 55 minutes one-way, and in winter weather can take substantially longer. Most Dallas County workers who commute to Springfield do so because the rent or home-purchase savings justify the drive, not because they prefer the arrangement.
For a landlord, Springfield commuter tenants are a meaningful but not dominant share of the Buffalo-area rental pool. These tenants typically have stronger credit profiles than purely local workforce applicants and can absorb rents at the higher end of the Buffalo range ($800 to $950 for single-family). They are also somewhat more mobile — if Springfield employment shifts or gas prices rise, commuter tenants may move closer to Springfield and vacate. A rental dependent on commuter demand carries that modest additional risk.
Eviction Procedure in the 30th Circuit
Missouri state law governs every eviction in Dallas County. The 30th Judicial Circuit covers Dallas, Hickory, Polk, and Webster counties, with the presiding judge’s chambers in Marshfield (Webster County). Dallas County cases are heard at the Buffalo courthouse. Associate Circuit Judge Lisa Henderson handles most civil, traffic, misdemeanor, probate, and small-claims matters at the Dallas County level; circuit-level matters rotate per the circuit’s calendar.
A standard nonpayment case begins with a demand for rent. Missouri imposes no minimum notice period for nonpayment beyond the demand itself; once rent is past due and a written demand has been delivered, the landlord may file a rent-and-possession action under RSMo Chapter 535. Dallas County hearings are typically scheduled within two to four weeks of filing. For a lease-violation eviction (unlawful detainer under RSMo Chapter 534), a 10-day notice to quit is required before filing. Uncontested nonpayment in Dallas typically closes in 28 to 35 days when the landlord’s documentation is clean; contested matters can extend to 50 days or more, particularly when judicial scheduling has to coordinate across the four-county circuit.
Security Deposits and Routine Compliance
Missouri imposes no cap on security deposits. Dallas County adds no local layer. Landlords typically collect one month’s rent as deposit. The compliance trap remains the 30-day return window with itemized deductions under RSMo §535.300. Document move-in and move-out condition with dated photos, produce a written itemization for any deductions, and mail the deposit balance within 30 days.
The Investment Frame
Dallas County is not a growth market, and its Springfield MSA designation does not change that. What Dallas offers is a low-basis, stable, somewhat-culturally-distinctive rural market with a small commuter layer, predictable tenant demand patterns, and almost no competition from external investors. Acquisition prices under $100,000 for single-family rental inventory are common; rents in the $600 to $950 range support workable cash flow for a hands-on operator.
The wrong assumption for Dallas County is that MSA status implies metropolitan economics. It doesn’t. Dallas is a rural Ozark county that happens to be statistically grouped with Springfield, and a rental strategy built on metro-style growth expectations will underperform. The right approach is a rural-market strategy with awareness of the Springfield commuter layer and respect for the cultural distinctiveness of the Amish/Mennonite community presence. For an operator with local roots or willing to develop them, Dallas can produce steady, modest income on a small portfolio with minimal drama.
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