The Missouri property tax calculator gives you a fast, reliable estimate of your annual and monthly property-tax bill based on your home value and the state’s average effective rate. Whether you are buying a home in Kansas City, refinancing in Springfield, or comparing counties before relocating, you can see exactly what to budget in seconds — no spreadsheet required.
How the calculation works
Missouri property tax is charged against the assessed value of your property, not its full market value. For residential property — the category covering most owner-occupied homes — the assessed value is 19% of market value. County, municipal, and special-district millage rates are then applied to that assessed figure.
The effective rate used in this calculator is the standard comparison shortcut:
Effective rate = total tax paid ÷ market value
When this tool quotes Missouri’s statewide average of 0.88%, it means that on average Missouri homeowners pay $8.80 in annual property tax for every $1,000 of their home’s market value. The formula is simply:
Annual tax = home value × (effective rate ÷ 100)
Monthly tax is the annual figure divided by 12.
Worked example
Suppose you purchase a home in Boone County (Columbia area) for $300,000. Boone County’s average effective rate is approximately 0.93%.
- Annual property tax: $300,000 × 0.0093 = $2,790
- Monthly property tax: $2,790 ÷ 12 = $232.50
- Tax per $1,000 of value: $9.30
Now compare that across several Missouri locations on the same home:
| Home value | Location | Eff. rate | Annual tax | Monthly |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $300,000 | Statewide avg | 0.88% | $2,640 | $220 |
| $300,000 | St. Louis City | 1.31% | $3,930 | $328 |
| $300,000 | St. Louis County | 1.27% | $3,810 | $318 |
| $300,000 | Jackson Co. (KC) | 0.97% | $2,910 | $243 |
| $300,000 | Greene Co. (Springfield) | 0.85% | $2,550 | $213 |
| $300,000 | Shannon Co. (lowest) | 0.46% | $1,380 | $115 |
St. Louis City residents pay roughly $2,550 more per year on the same $300,000 home than a Shannon County resident — a striking illustration of how much location shapes your tax bill within a single state.
All figures are calculated in your browser — nothing is uploaded or stored.
How Missouri’s assessment system works
Missouri uses a tiered assessment system tied to property class:
- Residential (19%) — owner-occupied homes, rental residential, condominiums.
- Agricultural (12%) — farmland valued at its agricultural productivity.
- Commercial / industrial (32%) — offices, retail, warehouses, factories.
- Personal property (33.3%) — vehicles, business equipment, livestock.
A residential home with a market value of $300,000 therefore has an assessed value of $57,000 ($300,000 × 19%). If the combined county, city, and school levy totals 49 mills (a typical St. Louis County figure), the calculation runs: $57,000 × 0.049 = $2,793. The effective rate method short-circuits all those steps — it gives you the same answer by applying a single percentage directly to market value.
County rates vary widely — what to check before closing
Because Missouri millage is set at the county, municipal, and school-district level, the rate can jump substantially even between neighboring ZIP codes. Before relying on any estimate for a real purchase decision, verify:
- Your county millage rate — published by your county assessor or collector of revenue each autumn.
- City and special-district levies — municipalities like St. Louis, Kansas City, and Springfield add their own levies on top of the county rate. Tax-increment financing (TIF) districts can also affect the net bill.
- School-district boundaries — the school levy often accounts for 50–60% of the total mill rate, and district lines do not always follow city limits.
- Exemptions and credits you qualify for — the Homestead Preservation freeze and the Senior Citizens Circuit Breaker credit can meaningfully reduce your net cost.
This calculator gives you the right ballpark for budgeting and side-by-side comparison; your county assessor’s office or the Missouri State Tax Commission gives you the exact figure.