Harrison County Rentals: I-35 Positioning and a $57 Million Rural Hospital Expansion
Most rural Missouri counties are dealing with the slow grind of population decline, aging workforce, and hospitals that are closing rather than expanding. Harrison County is different — at least in one specific and genuinely important way. In 2025, Harrison County Community Hospital (HCCH) broke ground on a new $57 million facility in Bethany, funded by a USDA Rural Development Community Facilities Direct Loan with a fixed low-rate structure that the CEO has publicly called a key factor in making the project feasible. The new facility is expected to add 20-30 jobs to the hospital’s workforce on opening, expand service coverage to residents across five surrounding counties, and serve as a community development anchor for the region. For a 2026 rental investor looking at Harrison County, this is the single most important fact about the local economic trajectory.
The Interstate 35 Corridor Advantage
Bethany’s geographic position is genuinely strategic for a rural Missouri market. The city sits directly on Interstate 35 approximately 85 miles north of Kansas City and 90 miles south of Des Moines, Iowa. Unlike most rural Missouri counties, Harrison gets meaningful pass-through commerce — trucking, regional freight, travelers moving between two regional metros, and the supporting businesses that serve them. Truck stops, motels, restaurants, fuel stations, and related I-35 corridor services produce a workforce segment that rural operators in counties away from interstates don’t have access to.
For rental operators, the I-35 corridor workforce adds a distinctive tenant demand layer on top of the agricultural and professional employment base that would otherwise dominate. This workforce tends to have more variable schedules than traditional 9-to-5 employment and benefits from careful income verification, but the concentrated corridor demand is real and doesn’t exist in comparable magnitude in inland rural Missouri counties.
Harrison County Community Hospital and the Regional Healthcare Anchor
HCCH has served Bethany for more than seven decades. The new facility project represents the most significant capital investment in the county’s healthcare infrastructure in a generation. Beyond the 20-30 new jobs the CEO has cited, the expanded facility will offer broader preventive care, outpatient specialty services, and emergency capabilities that until now required Harrison residents to drive to St. Joseph, Kansas City, or Des Moines. Mosaic Life Care operates specialty clinics at the Bethany hospital campus for cardiology, endocrinology, and other specialties, adding to the county’s healthcare employment footprint.
For rental operators, healthcare-sector tenants are generally among the strongest applicant segments in any market. In Harrison, they’re becoming more numerous and more stable over the next few years specifically because of the expansion project. A landlord who acquires rental inventory in or near Bethany and positions it for healthcare-worker tenants is aligning with the specific tailwind that distinguishes Harrison from most other small Missouri counties.
The Broader Employer Base
Beyond HCCH, Harrison has additional anchor employers. Gumdrop Books, a children’s book distribution business, operates a Bethany facility and is listed among the county’s major employers. Fargo Assembly of PA, Inc. runs a wire and cable assembly operation. Hy-Vee Grocery and Walmart operate stores in Bethany supporting retail employment. South Harrison R-II School District is one of the county’s largest public-sector employers and has been showing increasing enrollment — a positive indicator for a rural Missouri school district. The smaller school districts in Cainsville, Ridgeway, Gilman City, and the other smaller communities add additional public-sector employment.
Agricultural operations across the county’s 725 square miles round out the employment base. The county has long been agricultural in character, with row-crop farming, cattle operations, and related agribusiness supporting employment across the rural townships.
Bethany and the Rental Market
Single-family rents in Bethany typically run $550 to $850 depending on condition and location. Acquisition prices for rental-grade single-family inventory commonly range from $50,000 to $125,000 — on the affordable end even for rural Missouri. The city’s housing stock includes a mix of early 20th-century houses on tree-lined residential streets and newer construction on the town’s edges. Rental inventory in Eagleville (the next-largest community) and the smaller Harrison towns is thin but available for operators willing to work at very small scale.
Bethany itself is a noteworthy historical landmark for one geologic reason: the city is the point of origin and namesake for a significant US limestone formation (“Bethany Falls limestone”), which was originally named for outcroppings in the Harrison County area. This doesn’t affect rental economics directly, but it’s a distinctive piece of Harrison’s identity.
Eviction Procedure in the 3rd Circuit
Missouri state law governs every eviction in Harrison County. The 3rd Judicial Circuit covers Grundy, Harrison, Mercer, and Putnam counties. Harrison cases are heard at the WPA-era Harrison County Courthouse at 1500 Central Street in Bethany. Circuit Judge Jack E. Peace and Associate Circuit Judge Thomas R. Alley preside locally, with the circuit clerk’s office at (660) 425-6425. The courthouse itself is a three-story gray-stone structure with marble-lined hallways, built as a WPA project during the New Deal era. The clerk’s office runs 8:00am to 4:30pm Monday through Friday.
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. Harrison County hearings are typically scheduled within two to three 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 Harrison typically closes in 28 to 35 days when documentation is clean; contested matters can extend to 50 days or more.
Security Deposits and Routine Compliance
Missouri imposes no cap on security deposits. Harrison 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
Harrison County offers the rare rural-Missouri combination of a strategic interstate-corridor position, a genuinely growing healthcare anchor (with federal-loan-backed capital investment behind the expansion), a growing school district, modest acquisition prices, and manageable eviction timelines in the 3rd Circuit. Against that: the aging demographic (23.3% over 65) points to long-term population pressure, and the small market scale limits the absolute size of any portfolio an investor can build here. For an investor willing to work at small-rural-county scale with a specific focus on healthcare-worker and school-district tenant segments, Harrison is among the more favorably positioned small Missouri counties.
|