A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Madison County, Missouri
Madison County sits at the northeastern edge of the Ozarks in southeastern Missouri, a compact county of 498 square miles where the St. Francois Mountains shape the terrain and where the history of lead mining stretches back more than three centuries. Organized December 14, 1818 and named for President James Madison, the county holds a distinction unique in Missouri: it is home to Mine La Motte, the oldest lead mine west of the Mississippi River, first worked by French explorers around 1715. That history — of extraction, of industrial labor, of boom and contraction — has left its mark on every dimension of Madison County’s present-day economy, demographics, and housing market. For a landlord evaluating the county, it is essential context.
Fredericktown: A Small City in a Large Forest
Fredericktown is Madison County’s county seat and its only community of meaningful size, with approximately 4,429 to 4,654 residents. The city sits in the valley of the Little St. Francis River, and in a geographic circumstance unusual for any Missouri county seat, it is surrounded on three sides — east, west, and south — by the easternmost parcel of Mark Twain National Forest. This creates a dramatic natural setting but also constrains the city’s ability to expand its developed footprint in those directions. US-67 runs along the western edge of the city, connecting Fredericktown north 18 miles to Farmington (in St. Francois County) and south 65 miles to Poplar Bluff.
The Farmington connection is economically important for Fredericktown residents. Farmington, with its larger retail sector, hospitals, and employment base, draws commuters from Madison County. Some Madison County renters will have Farmington employment income, and landlords should factor the commute dependence of those tenants into their risk assessment. A job loss or change in Farmington can quickly change a tenant’s calculus about whether to remain in Fredericktown or move closer to their employer.
The Economic Transition: Mining Legacy to New Manufacturing
Madison County’s economy is in a genuine transition. The county’s mining heritage — lead, iron, and related minerals — sustained employment for generations but has contracted substantially as the region’s most accessible ore bodies were exhausted. Healthcare, retail, and government employment have partially filled the gap. The county’s poverty rate of approximately 17.2% reflects the economic stress of communities that have not fully found replacement employment for lost industrial jobs. Only approximately 7.8% of adults in the county hold bachelor’s degrees, and the county’s educational attainment profile reflects a workforce oriented toward manual trades, skilled technical work, and service employment rather than professional or managerial roles.
A significant development in recent years is the establishment of the Critical Mineral Recovery (CMR) battery plant in Fredericktown — described as one of the largest lithium-ion battery recovery facilities in the world. This facility represents a meaningful new manufacturing employer in a county that has long needed exactly that. Manufacturing employment at facilities like CMR tends to provide stable, above-average-for-the-market wages, and workers employed there represent a more financially stable segment of the prospective tenant pool. Landlords should be aware, however, that new manufacturing facilities carry operational risks — including the fire and explosions that occurred at the CMR plant in October 2024 — and that employment stability at any single large employer should not be assumed as permanent when evaluating long-term lease commitments.
The 2021 Tornado and Its Implications for Property Acquisition
On October 24, 2021, an EF3 tornado struck Fredericktown, causing significant property damage throughout the city. EF3 tornadoes produce winds in the 136-165 mph range and can cause severe structural damage to well-built homes and commercial buildings. For landlords acquiring properties in Fredericktown, this event creates a specific due diligence obligation: any property that was in the tornado’s path must be verified to have been properly repaired, inspected, and permitted following the storm. Tornado damage that was patched cosmetically but not structurally repaired can result in habitability issues, code violations, and legal exposure for landlords who acquire and rent such properties without adequate inspection. Request documentation of post-storm repairs and permits before closing on any Fredericktown property acquired after October 2021, and conduct a professional inspection with particular attention to structural elements, roofing, electrical systems, and windows.
Income Verification in a High-Poverty Market
A county poverty rate of 17.2% means that a significantly larger fraction of prospective applicants will not meet conventional income thresholds than in more economically developed Missouri markets. The three-times-monthly-rent income standard is not bureaucratic formality in this context — it is a front-line screen that will protect a landlord from many of the tenancies most likely to end in nonpayment. Verify income through pay stubs (at least two recent periods), bank statements (at least two to three months), or prior-year tax returns. Do not rely on self-reported income alone. For manufacturing workers, verify both the employer and the stability of the specific facility. For healthcare and government workers, verify employment status and position, as these sectors in small communities can also experience sudden changes. Apply the same standard to every applicant and document every decision.
The 24th Judicial Circuit and Eviction Procedure
All Madison County evictions file with the 24th Judicial Circuit at the Madison County Courthouse, 3 Court Square, Fredericktown, MO 63645. The Circuit Clerk’s office is at the 3 Court Square annex building (the main courthouse at 1 Court Square houses county administrative offices). Circuit Clerk: (573) 783-2102. Contact the clerk’s office directly to confirm current office hours before filing.
Missouri’s eviction procedure applies uniformly throughout Madison County. For nonpayment of rent, no statutory minimum notice period is required; a written demand for rent may be served immediately, and upon the tenant’s failure to pay or vacate, the landlord may file a petition for unlawful detainer with the 24th Circuit. 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 retain a licensed Missouri attorney for all proceedings. Uncontested evictions in the 24th Circuit typically resolve in 25 to 55 days from filing.
Security Deposits and Move-In Documentation
Missouri imposes no cap on security deposit amounts. In Madison County’s market, where rents are modest and prospective tenants have limited financial capacity, collecting one month’s rent as a deposit is standard. For tenants with thin credit histories or prior rental issues, some landlords collect up to six weeks’ rent. Whatever amount is collected must be returned with an itemized written statement of deductions within 30 days of the tenant vacating and returning keys, per RSMo §535.300. Move-in documentation is particularly important in a county where older housing stock is common and tornado-related repairs may have been made to some units. Photograph every room, every wall, every fixture, and every appliance at move-in with timestamped images, and have the tenant sign and return a written inspection form. Retain all documentation for at least one year after the tenancy ends.
Madison County is a challenging but viable rental market for landlords who approach it with realistic expectations, rigorous screening, and careful property due diligence. The emerging manufacturing sector, the proximity to Farmington, and the county’s stable government and healthcare employment base provide genuine rental demand. The high poverty rate, older housing stock, and tornado-era property considerations require active management and careful verification practices to navigate successfully.
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