A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Nodaway County, Missouri
Nodaway County sits in the far northwest corner of Missouri, a vast county of rolling prairie and agricultural land organized February 14, 1845 and named for the Nodaway River. At approximately 877 square miles, it is the fifth-largest county by area in Missouri — a geographic footprint that reflects its origins in the Platte Purchase of 1836, when Missouri acquired the northwest triangle of land between the Missouri and Platte rivers from the federal government. Despite its large area, the county’s 2020 census population of 21,241 is concentrated primarily in Maryville, the county seat and its only significant urban center. Maryville anchors the Maryville, Missouri Micropolitan Statistical Area and serves as the commercial, governmental, and educational hub for a wide swath of northwest Missouri.
Northwest Missouri State University: The Dominant Market Force
Northwest Missouri State University is the defining institution of the Nodaway County rental market. Founded in 1905 and located in Maryville, Northwest enrolls approximately 6,000–7,000 students and has won multiple Division II national football championships. The university’s grounds were famously designed as a re-creation of the landscape of the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair, and the Missouri State Legislature designated Northwest as the official Missouri Arboretum in 1993. ESPN has carried its championship football appearances, giving the school a national profile that belies its modest enrollment numbers.
For landlords, Northwest Missouri State creates a classic university rental market: strong seasonal demand concentrated near campus, high tenant turnover tied to academic-year cycles, and a tenant pool that skews young and income-limited. The county’s published poverty rate of approximately 16.5% is substantially inflated by the student population — college students who live away from their families and report little to no personal income skew poverty measurements in all college towns. The actual poverty rate among non-student permanent residents is considerably lower and more reflective of the agricultural economy that supports the broader county.
Landlords renting to students should use co-signer or guarantor leases requiring a parent or guardian to guarantee the rent obligation. Guarantors should meet the same income threshold as any other applicant — at least three times the monthly rent in documented annual income. Set move-in and move-out inspection appointments in advance of the academic-year transitions (August and May), photograph every unit thoroughly, and return deposits with itemized statements within Missouri’s 30-day window. The high-volume, high-turnover nature of university rental markets rewards process discipline over casual management.
The Agricultural Market Outside Maryville
Beyond Maryville, Nodaway County is a pure northwest Missouri agricultural county: corn, soybeans, and cattle on rolling prairie, with small communities including Barnard, Hopkins, Skidmore, Ravenwood, and Guilford serving as agricultural service centers. Skidmore carries a notable and dark place in American true-crime history as the site of Ken McElroy’s notorious 1981 shooting, but it is today an ordinary small farming community. The rural rental market outside Maryville is modest — demand is limited to agricultural workers, local service employees, and residents who prefer a rural setting near the county’s highway network. US-71 and US-136 connect the county to St. Joseph (~50 miles south) and to Iowa to the north.
The 4th Judicial Circuit
All Nodaway County evictions file with the 4th Judicial Circuit at the Nodaway County Courthouse, 305 N. Main Street, Maryville, MO 64468. Circuit Clerk: (660) 582-5431. Hours: Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. — note the 8:30 a.m. opening, slightly later than most Missouri circuit clerks. Plan filings and courthouse visits accordingly. Missouri’s eviction procedure applies uniformly: for nonpayment, serve a written demand for rent and file upon the tenant’s failure to pay or vacate; for lease violations, a 10-day notice to quit is required under RSMo Chapter 441. LLCs and business entities must retain a licensed Missouri attorney. Uncontested evictions in the 4th Circuit typically resolve in 20 to 45 days from filing.
Security deposits: no cap under Missouri law. Return with an itemized statement within 30 days of move-out and key return per RSMo §535.300. Nodaway County’s university rental market is one of the more opportunity-rich rural Missouri markets for landlords who understand the student lifecycle and build their screening and management processes around it.
|