A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Livingston County, Missouri
Livingston County occupies 539 square miles of rolling terrain in the northwestern quarter of Missouri, positioned along the US-36 corridor that stretches east to west across the state’s northern tier. Its county seat of Chillicothe is the county’s dominant community, home to well over half the county’s total population and the center of its commerce, healthcare, government, and judicial functions. Organized on January 6, 1837 and named for Edward Livingston — jurist, statesman, and co-author of Louisiana’s influential civil code — the county has a deep agricultural heritage overlaid with a modern economic profile shaped in part by two state correctional facilities that make Chillicothe demographically unusual among Missouri rural county seats. For landlords, understanding both the county’s conventional rental market and the specific screening considerations its correctional economy creates is essential to operating effectively here.
Chillicothe: Home of Sliced Bread and a Complex Rental Market
Chillicothe holds a remarkable distinction in American food history: it was here, on July 7, 1928, that Otto Frederick Rohwedder’s bread-slicing machine was first put to commercial use at the Chillicothe Baking Company, producing the world’s first commercially sliced bread. The city has embraced this legacy, and it forms part of Chillicothe’s identity as a place that values both innovation and community character. With a current population of approximately 8,900 to 9,400 residents, Chillicothe is the county’s commercial hub, home to Hedrick Medical Center, the county’s largest employer, along with manufacturing, retail, and government employment.
The city’s poverty rate of approximately 16.8% reflects a working-class community with real economic stress. This is not a poverty rate that should alarm a landlord who is screening properly, but it does mean that a meaningful fraction of applicants will not meet conventional income thresholds. Apply the three-times-monthly-rent income standard consistently and verify income through pay stubs, bank statements, or tax returns rather than accepting self-reported income alone. Chillicothe’s median household income runs approximately $54,000 — workable for landlords who price units realistically for the market.
The Correctional Facility Factor
Livingston County is home to two Missouri Department of Corrections facilities: the Chillicothe Correctional Center, a women’s medium-security prison, and the Crossroads Correctional Center, a medium-security men’s facility. Together these institutions employ a significant number of corrections officers, administrative staff, and support personnel, and they create a population dynamic that affects the county’s demographics in ways landlords should understand.
The county’s 2020 census reported an unusually low male-to-female ratio: just 80.5 males per 100 females overall, and 74.8 males per 100 females among the adult population. This imbalance is substantially driven by the incarcerated population at Crossroads, where incarcerated individuals are counted at their place of incarceration rather than their home address. For landlords, the practical implication is that the conventional free-population demographics of Chillicothe skew toward more female-headed households than the raw numbers suggest.
The correctional facilities also create a distinct segment of the rental market: corrections officers, case managers, counselors, and administrative staff who relocate to Chillicothe for employment. State corrections employment typically offers stable income, predictable schedules, and benefits — making corrections employees potentially attractive tenants from a financial stability standpoint. However, corrections work also involves significant occupational stress, irregular shifts, and some rate of staff turnover as employees transfer between facilities or leave the profession. Landlords renting to corrections staff should verify current employment status and confirm the facility to which the tenant is assigned.
A more sensitive consideration: some landlords in communities with correctional facilities encounter applications from individuals who are recently released from incarceration or who are family members of incarcerated individuals relocating to be near the facility. Missouri law does not prohibit landlords from considering criminal history in their screening process, but federal fair housing guidance cautions against blanket bans that disproportionately exclude protected classes. Landlords should conduct individualized assessments of criminal history — considering the nature of the offense, how long ago it occurred, and evidence of rehabilitation — rather than applying a categorical rule. Consult with a Missouri attorney before adopting a formal criminal history screening policy.
Chillicothe’s Healthcare and Manufacturing Economy
Beyond the correctional sector, Chillicothe’s economy rests on healthcare, manufacturing, retail, and agricultural services. Hedrick Medical Center is the county’s largest private employer and the anchor of the county’s healthcare sector. Healthcare employment tends to produce stable, reasonably well-compensated tenants — nurses, technicians, administrative staff — who value lease stability and proximity to the hospital. Manufacturing employment in Chillicothe has contracted over the decades but remains a meaningful employer. Agricultural services and supply businesses serve the surrounding rural county and provide additional stable employment for some renters.
The county’s position on US-36 provides highway access to both St. Joseph (approximately 65 miles west) and Kansas City (approximately 85 miles southwest), giving some Chillicothe residents the option to commute to the larger metro employment markets. This commuter dynamic is not as strong as in counties immediately adjacent to the metro areas, but it does mean that some tenants will have metro-area employment incomes that differ from Chillicothe’s local wage base. Verify commute-dependent income with the same rigor as local employment.
The 43rd Judicial Circuit
All Livingston County evictions file with the 43rd Judicial Circuit at the Livingston County Courthouse, 700 Webster Street, Chillicothe, MO 64601. Circuit Clerk Brenda Wright can be reached at (660) 646-8000, ext. 305. Court hours are Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. — among the later closing times in Missouri, giving landlords and their attorneys a full business day window for filings and inquiries. The 43rd Circuit also serves Caldwell, Clinton, Daviess, and DeKalb counties; all Livingston County matters file in Chillicothe. The courthouse itself is a notable Bedford limestone and brick structure on the public square, featuring 44 rooms and a 71-by-53-foot courtroom with circular seating.
Missouri’s eviction procedure is uniform statewide. For nonpayment of rent, no minimum notice period is required — a written demand for rent may be served immediately, and if the tenant fails to pay or vacate, the landlord may file a petition for unlawful detainer with the circuit court. For lease violations other than nonpayment, a 10-day notice to quit is required under RSMo Chapter 441. Serve all notices by a documented method. LLCs and other business entities must be represented by a licensed Missouri attorney. Uncontested evictions typically resolve in 25 to 50 days in this circuit.
Security Deposits and Practical Screening Guidance
Missouri imposes no cap on security deposit amounts. In Chillicothe’s market, collecting one to two months’ rent as a deposit is standard practice. Whatever amount is collected must be returned with a written itemized statement of deductions within 30 days of the tenant vacating and returning keys, per RSMo §535.300. Document move-in conditions thoroughly with dated photographs and a signed inspection checklist.
Given the county’s correctional facilities and elevated poverty rate, background and credit checks are particularly important in Livingston County. Run checks consistently on all applicants. Verify employment at the time of application — not just at the time of lease signing, as corrections employment in particular can change between application and move-in. For applicants with corrections employment, confirm the facility and the nature of the position. For applicants with recent gaps in employment history or prior addresses near other correctional facilities, conduct additional reference checks to establish a clear rental and employment picture.
Livingston County is a workable rural market for landlords who screen diligently and maintain units competitively. The correctional economy creates a distinct and sometimes overlooked source of stable rental demand from corrections staff, while the healthcare and manufacturing sectors provide additional tenant pipeline. The key is understanding the market’s specific character and applying screening standards that are both rigorous and legally compliant.
|