Missouri Mortgage Guide

Calculator, current rates, and local market insights for MO

Last Updated: April 1, 2026

Median Price

$258K

Property Tax

0.97%

0.13% below avg

Closing Costs

~1.9%

of loan amount

Market

Seller's Market

Calculate Your Missouri Mortgage Payment

Pre-filled with Missouri's median home price ($258,099) and property tax rate (0.97%). Adjust the values to match your situation.

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PMI required if down payment is less than 20%. Automatically removed at 80% LTV.

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Loan Amount: $206,479
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Escrow & Additional Costs (monthly)Total: $209/mo
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Missouri Mortgage Rates

Compare today's mortgage rates from top lenders in Missouri.

Purchase Rates

Compare rates for buying a home in Missouri.

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Refinance Rates

Compare rates for refinancing your Missouri mortgage.

View Refinance Rates

What Affects Your Missouri Mortgage Rate?

Credit Score

Higher scores get better rates

Down Payment

20%+ avoids PMI

Property Type

Primary homes get best rates

Loan Term

15-year has lower rates

Refinancing in Missouri

See if refinancing could lower your monthly payment or help you pay off your mortgage faster.

Good Time to Refinance

  • Current rates are 0.5%+ lower than your rate
  • Your credit score has improved significantly
  • You want to switch from ARM to fixed-rate
  • You plan to stay in your home 3+ more years

Consider Waiting If

  • Rate difference is less than 0.5%
  • You plan to sell within 2 years
  • Closing costs exceed potential savings
  • Your credit score has dropped

Refinancing costs typically range from 2-6% of your loan amount. Calculate your break-even point to ensure savings outweigh costs.

Compare Missouri Refinance Rates

Missouri Housing Market Overview

$235,000 median—44% below national. That's real affordability, and right now it's a buyer's market, which means you've got actual negotiating room instead of getting into bidding wars.

The surprise most people don't expect: the price spread between metros is wild but not how you'd think. St. Louis sits around $210,000 median, Kansas City closer to $265,000. But here's what catches people—Clayton, the suburb just west of St. Louis, runs $450,000+ for homes that would be $220,000 twenty minutes away in places like Florissant or University City. You're paying for school districts more than anything else.

Property taxes run 0.97%, below the 1.1% national average. On that $235K home, you're looking at around $2,280 annually instead of the $2,600 you'd pay in most states.

The thing locals complain about that buyers from out of state don't expect: tornado season isn't just an occasional thing you see on the news. Insurance premiums reflect it, and you'll want to understand what your policy actually covers for wind and hail damage before closing. Most standard policies have separate deductibles for wind damage—sometimes 1-5% of your home's value, not the flat $1,000 deductible you're used to.

Springfield and Columbia offer even cheaper entry points if you don't need to be in the major metros—medians around $185,000-$200,000 with decent healthcare and education job markets

Missouri Home Buyer Programs

Missouri's main first-time buyer program through the Missouri Housing Development Commission (MHDC) is actually two programs you can stack together, which most people don't realize. The First Place Loan gives you a below-market interest rate—usually around 0.5% to 1% lower than conventional rates—and you can combine it with down payment assistance up to 4% of your purchase price. That 4% comes as a second mortgage that you don't pay back as long as you stay in the home for at least five years. Leave before that and you'll owe a prorated amount.

There's also a Cash Assistance program that offers up to $5,000 as a grant for closing costs. This one doesn't have to be repaid at all, which makes it more valuable than the DPA if you're only short on cash for closing.

The catch everyone hits: income limits based on county and household size, plus the home's purchase price can't exceed MHDC's limits. In St. Louis and Kansas City those limits are more generous than in rural areas, but you still need to check specifics for where you're actually buying. And you have to take a homebuyer education course before closing, which takes about eight hours online.

You can't go directly to MHDC—you need to work with an approved lender who participates in their programs. Not all mortgage companies do this, so ask upfront or you'll waste time getting pre-approved with someone who can't help you access these funds.

Programs change frequently with funding availability. Check current terms and find participating lenders at mhdc.com.

Mortgage Regulations in Missouri

Here's the thing that trips people up: Missouri doesn't have a state transfer tax. Zero. But that doesn't mean you're not paying anything at closing – counties and cities can still charge their own. St. Louis City hits you with $3 per $1,000, which is actually one of the highest in the state. Meanwhile, most counties charge around $1-$1.50 per $1,000, and some rural areas charge nothing at all. So your closing costs in Columbia versus Kansas City versus some smaller town? They'll look pretty different just on the tax line alone.

The other thing is foreclosures here run through the courts, but Missouri's version is weirdly fast for a judicial state. You're looking at around 60-90 days typically. The lender has to file a lawsuit, but judges move these through quickly and there's no right of redemption after the sale in most cases. Once the foreclosure sale happens, you're done – the new owner takes possession almost immediately.

And one quirky piece: Missouri has this Homestead Exemption law that protects up to $15,000 in home equity from creditors (more if you're married or over 60). It's not huge, but it exists if things go sideways financially. Talk to a local attorney if you need to know how this applies to your situation specifically.

Tips for Buying a Home in Missouri

Missouri doesn't require sellers to disclose property condition beyond lead paint if the house was built before 1978. That's it. No mandatory disclosure forms about foundation issues, previous flooding, HVAC problems—nothing. You're basically flying blind unless you ask the right questions and pay for thorough inspections. This catches out-of-state buyers constantly, especially people coming from states with comprehensive disclosure laws.

Budget hard for homeowners insurance, and I mean really pad that number. Tornado and hail damage claims have pushed rates up 30-40% in the past few years across much of the state. If you're looking at houses in the St. Louis metro or anywhere in the I-70 corridor, you're gonna see quotes around $2,000-$3,000 annually for a typical $235K home. And that's before you add earthquake coverage, which isn't required but probably should be if you're near the New Madrid Seismic Zone in southeast Missouri.

The other thing—apply for your homestead exemption right after closing. You've got until December 31st of the year you purchase, but counties like Jackson (Kansas City) and St. Louis County won't backdate it. Miss that deadline and you're paying full freight on property taxes for the entire next year. It's only around $1,100 in savings annually on a median-priced home, but that's money you're leaving on the table for no reason.

Frequently Asked Questions About Missouri Mortgages

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Affiliate Disclosure: AmCalc may receive compensation when you click on links to partner sites. This does not affect our editorial content or the rates you receive. All rates and terms are subject to lender approval.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides educational estimates only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. State-specific information is for general reference and may not reflect your individual situation. Actual loan terms, costs, and savings vary by lender, credit profile, and market conditions. Tax laws are complex and change frequently. Consult qualified professionals for personalized guidance.