Property Tax Relief for Seniors in Missouri

Last updated: 22 March 2026

Bottom line: Missouri seniors usually need to check two separate kinds of help: the statewide Missouri Property Tax Credit Claim (MO-PTC) for lower-income seniors and the local senior property-tax freeze credit that only exists if a county or city adopted it. Missouri does not have a broad statewide senior homestead exemption, and Franklin County’s official explainer says the older Homestead Preservation Act is not funded at this time.

That matters because older adults are a large share of the state: the U.S. Census Bureau says 18.7% of Missourians are age 65 or older. If you live on a fixed income, a missed filing window or the wrong form can cost real money.

If your tax bill is threatening your housing right now

Fast ways to cut a Missouri property-tax burden

What real property-tax help looks like in Missouri

Start here: Separate the state credit from the local freeze. They are not the same. One is claimed through the Missouri Department of Revenue. The other is controlled by your county or city under state law, and the rules can differ sharply from one place to another.

Relief type What it really does Where it exists Biggest catch
MO-PTC circuit-breaker credit Can reduce Missouri income tax or send a refund based on the real estate tax or rent you paid. Statewide Strict income, age/disability, and paperwork rules apply.
Local senior property-tax freeze credit Credits future increases above a base year on your homestead. Only in counties or cities that adopted it Not retroactive, and many levies can still rise.
Homestead Preservation Act Older state law meant to offset large tax increases for some homeowners. State law still exists Official county guidance says it is not funded at this time.
True property-tax exemption A narrow constitutional exemption applies to a former prisoner of war with a total service-connected disability. Very limited This is not a general senior exemption.

About rebates and deferrals: In Missouri, the statewide program most people think of as a “rebate” is the MO-PTC refund or credit. In our March 2026 review of current Department of Revenue and State Tax Commission pages, we found statewide credits and local freeze programs, but not a standard statewide senior property-tax deferral application. If cash flow is the problem, ask your county collector about installment plans or local payment options.

Five facts worth knowing first

Who qualifies

The statewide and local programs use different age rules. The state MO-PTC form uses separate eligibility boxes for people who are age 65 or older, age 60 or older and receiving surviving-spouse Social Security benefits, 100% disabled, or 100% service-connected disabled as a veteran. Most local freeze programs start at age 62 for homeowners.

State credit limits for tax year 2025 Single Married filing combined Maximum credit
Renter or part-year owner $27,200 $29,200 Up to $750
Owned and occupied home all year $30,000 $34,000 Up to $1,100

These limits and maximums come from the 2025 Missouri instructions and the Department of Revenue FAQ. If your home sits on more than five acres, the state says you need Assessor Certification Form 948 to show the tax on the homestead and five acres.

Missouri programs to check first

Missouri Property Tax Credit Claim (MO-PTC)

  • What it is: Missouri’s statewide “circuit-breaker” program. It can give eligible seniors and certain disabled Missourians a credit based on the real estate tax or rent they paid, up to $1,100 for owners and $750 for renters.
  • Who can get it: The official form covers people in one of the program’s eligibility categories listed in the 2025 instructions, and you must also meet the current income limits.
  • How it helps: This is the closest thing Missouri has to a statewide senior property-tax rebate. Renters can qualify too, but not if the facility does not pay property tax.
  • How to apply: File Form MO-PTC if you are not required to file a Missouri income-tax return. If you do need to file a return, use Form MO-PTS with Form MO-1040. The current due date for the 2025 claim is April 15, 2026.
  • What to gather: Paid real estate tax receipt or rent records, 1099s, W-2s, Social Security or Veterans Affairs letters, and the rent paperwork listed in the state FAQ and form instructions.

Real-world note: A common mistake is filing the wrong state form. The Department of Revenue says people who must file a Missouri income-tax return should use MO-PTS + MO-1040, not MO-PTC.


Local senior property-tax freeze credits

  • What it is: A local credit that generally covers the difference between your current homestead tax liability and your “initial credit year” or base year under Missouri law.
  • Who can get it: State law says an eligible taxpayer is a Missouri resident who is 62 or older, owns the homestead or has a legal or equitable interest in it, and is liable for the real estate taxes on that homestead, but local programs can add application rules, document rules, acreage rules, or value caps.
  • How it helps: It can stop part of your bill from rising above a base year, but it is not retroactive, it is usually not a cash refund, and it often does not freeze every levy.
  • How to apply: Contact your local office because counties and cities run their own programs. Use the State Tax Commission assessor directory and county collector directory to find the correct office.
  • What to gather: Proof of age, proof of residency, deed or trust papers, parcel number, and sometimes extra papers if ownership is through a trust or other written instrument, as shown on the Boone, Clay, and Buchanan county pages.

Why this matters: Two seniors with the same income can get very different answers depending on where they live. Missouri created the authority in state law, but your county or city decides the local process.

Local example 2026 timing Rules seniors often miss Contact
St. Louis City Annual window runs March 1-June 30 Only City taxes are frozen. Schools, library, zoo/museum, sewer, and other levies can still rise. The property must generally be worth $514,500 or less, prior-year taxes must be paid, and tax-abated property is not eligible. Office of the Assessor: 314-622-4185
Clay County January 1-March 31, 2026 Annual renewal is required. The program is not retroactive. Clay says debt levies and the Blind Pension Fund can still change your bill. County information line: 816-407-3600
Boone County County says the 2026 period will begin no later than April 1, 2026 and run through June 30, 2026 Initial applications must be signed before a notary. Approved base-year 2024 and 2025 applicants are now auto-renewed. Boone also limits the homestead credit calculation to the home and up to 2.5 acres. Collector: 573-886-4285
Buchanan County Applications open April 1 and close May 31 each year Annual written reaffirmation is required. Buchanan limits the homestead credit calculation to the home and up to one acre. The county says it will send approval or denial within 45 days. Use the official collector page

Homestead Preservation Act

  • What it is: An older Missouri law meant to offset some homestead tax increases under Section 137.106.
  • Who can get it: In practice, this is not the first program to chase right now because official county guidance says the act is not funded at this time, and the statute itself says no credit applies if no appropriation is made.
  • How it helps: If funded, it would work as a credit against property-tax increases. As of March 2026, it is not the practical path most seniors should count on.
  • How to apply: Focus first on the MO-PTC and your local collector or assessor.
  • What to gather: Nothing special for now unless Missouri restores funding and publishes a live application path.

How to apply without wasting time or missing a deadline

Application checklist

  • ☐ Proof of age, such as a driver’s license, passport, or birth certificate listed by Boone or Buchanan County
  • ☐ Proof of Missouri residency and the address of the homestead
  • ☐ Deed, trust certificate, or other ownership paper
  • ☐ Paid real estate tax receipt, or rent paperwork if filing the state credit
  • ☐ 1099s, W-2s, SSA-1099, or VA letters listed in the state instructions
  • ☐ Parcel number and current tax bill
  • ☐ Notary if your county requires one, such as Boone County

Reality checks before you spend hours applying

  • A freeze usually does not help with this year’s bill: For example, Boone County says a 2026 base-year approval would show the eligible credit on the 2027 bill.
  • “Frozen” does not mean your whole bill can never rise: St. Louis City freezes only City taxes, and Clay County says debt levies and the Blind Pension Fund can still change.
  • Ownership paper problems are common: Trusts, life estates, mixed-use property, duplexes, and homes on larger acreage often need extra review in Boone, Buchanan, and St. Louis City.
  • Missing a deadline can change your base year: Clay County says the relief is not retroactive, and late re-entry can reset the year used for future calculations.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Using the wrong state form: The Department of Revenue draws a clear line between MO-PTC and MO-PTS with MO-1040.
  • Claiming the wrong amount of tax paid: The state FAQ says penalties, interest, sewer lateral charges, and other local fees should not be counted as real estate tax for MO-PTC.
  • Assuming your mortgage company will handle everything: Boone County says the taxpayer is still responsible for making sure escrow pays the correct amount on time.
  • Forgetting renewals: Some counties require them every year. Clay and Buchanan do. Boone changed its rule for already approved applicants.
  • Thinking every nursing home or senior housing building qualifies: The state says you cannot claim MO-PTC if the facility does not pay property tax.

Best options by need

If your application gets denied

  • Ask for the denial in writing: You need the exact reason, the date, and whether you can fix missing documents before the deadline.
  • If it is a state MO-PTC problem: Contact the Missouri Department of Revenue at 573-751-3505. If you already filed, the return-status line is 573-526-8299.
  • If it is a local freeze problem: Call the county or city office named on the denial and ask whether you can cure missing proof of age, residency, or ownership, or whether you must reapply next cycle. Local review rules vary.
  • If the real issue is the assessment or tax process itself: Ask the State Tax Commission ombudsman at 573-526-8259 how to raise a fairness or process concern.
  • Keep copies of everything: Save tax receipts, postmarks, confirmation emails, and notes of every phone call.

What to try if the main path fails

  • File late on the state credit if you still can: The Department of Revenue says MO-PTC claims can be filed up to three years after the original due date.
  • Ask about payment timing: Some counties let you use installment plans. For example, Boone County says people on its monthly installment plan may still participate in the local credit program.
  • Plan for next year now: If you missed a local freeze deadline, calendar the next local window because waiting can reset your base year and shrink future savings.
  • Check veteran-specific rules: A veteran senior who is a former prisoner of war and has a total service-connected disability should review the constitutional homestead exemption.

Local resources

  • County assessor and collector offices: Use the official assessor directory and collector directory for local deadlines, tax receipts, and freeze rules.
  • Area Agencies on Aging and regional guides: The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services keeps region and county resource lists for older adults. A state senior-services page also lists 1-800-235-5503 as a way to find local aging help.
  • Free tax-prep help: AARP Foundation Tax-Aide is free and focuses on older adults with low-to-moderate income. The contact number is 1-888-227-7669.
  • Legal help: Legal Aid of Western Missouri advertises office hours for property and property-tax questions at 816-474-9868 ext. 4100. United Way’s Missouri resource guide also lists Mid-Missouri Legal Services at 1-800-568-4931 in Columbia and 888-476-4545 in Jefferson City.
  • Emergency support while you fix the tax issue: United Way 211 can connect you with local community action agencies, Salvation Army, St. Vincent de Paul, Catholic Charities, and other groups that may help with housing costs, food, transportation, or paperwork barriers.

Diverse communities and access notes

  • Seniors with disabilities: The state credit is also open to 100% disabled Missourians and 100% service-connected disabled veterans. If you need help collecting forms or traveling to an office, start with the DHSS regional resource lists.
  • Veteran seniors: The Missouri Constitution gives a true homestead tax exemption only to a former prisoner of war with a total service-connected disability. Separately, the state credit instructions say VA payments are not counted in income for a 100% service-connected disabled veteran applying for MO-PTC.
  • Rural seniors with limited access: Paper applications are still common, and phone help may be faster than websites. Use the official county office directories, 211, and free tax-prep sites before paying a fee-based service.

Other moves that may help

  • Ask for an assessment review if the value looks wrong: Relief programs do not fix a bad assessment by themselves. Start with the assessor.
  • Review escrow with your mortgage company: If your servicer pays taxes, confirm that any local freeze credit was reflected on the tax statement before the servicer overpays.
  • Get fee quotes in writing: If a private tax preparer or lawyer is needed for trust or title issues, ask for the price first. Some fixes are simple; some are not.
  • Remember that local freeze credits usually do not transfer: Clay County and Boone County both say a new home means a new application and often a new base year.

Frequently asked questions

Does Missouri have a senior homestead exemption?

Not in the broad way many people mean it. Missouri’s main senior property-tax tools are the state MO-PTC credit and locally adopted freeze credits. The Franklin County government page says Missouri does not generally exempt senior property and that the older Homestead Preservation Act is not funded at this time.

How much is the Missouri circuit-breaker credit?

For tax year 2025, filed in 2026, the maximum state credit is $1,100 for owners who owned and occupied the home all year and $750 for renters. The exact amount depends on your household income and the tax or rent you paid, using the official state chart and instructions.

Is the senior property-tax freeze available everywhere in Missouri?

No. The state created the local authority in Section 137.1050, but counties and cities still have to adopt their own program or approve it locally. That is why St. Louis City, Clay County, and Boone County can have different rules, dates, and documents.

Can renters or nursing-home residents get Missouri property-tax help?

Sometimes, yes. The statewide MO-PTC can help renters and some people in care settings because rent is treated as indirect property tax for the program. But the building must actually pay property taxes. If the facility is tax-exempt, the state says you are not eligible for the credit.

If my mortgage company pays my taxes, do I still need to apply?

Yes. A mortgage servicer does not automatically enroll you in a local freeze or state credit. You still have to file the application yourself. Boone County says it will share tax information with escrow companies that request it, but it is still the taxpayer’s job to make sure the bill gets paid correctly and on time.

Can I get both the state credit and a local freeze?

Often, yes, because they are different programs. The state MO-PTC is claimed through the Department of Revenue, while a local freeze credit is applied to the property-tax bill by your county or city. Still, ask your preparer or local office to confirm if your situation is unusual.

What happens if I miss the deadline?

The answer depends on the program. The state MO-PTC is more forgiving because you can file up to three years after the original due date. Local freeze programs are usually much stricter. Missing the window in Clay County or Boone County can mean waiting for the next cycle and possibly losing an older base year.

Resumen en español

En Missouri, la ayuda principal para adultos mayores no viene de una sola exención. Primero revise el Missouri Property Tax Credit Claim (MO-PTC), que puede dar un crédito o reembolso a personas mayores con ingresos bajos. Después, revise si su condado o ciudad tiene un programa local de congelación del impuesto sobre la propiedad. No todos los condados lo ofrecen, y las reglas cambian mucho según el lugar.

Si vive en St. Louis City, la ciudad publica su propia página oficial del programa. Si necesita ayuda para encontrar su oficina local, use los directorios oficiales del State Tax Commission. Para ayuda gratis con formularios, puede buscar una cita con AARP Tax-Aide. Si la situación es urgente, llame al 211 para apoyo local con vivienda, transporte o documentos.

About This Guide

This guide uses official federal and state sources, along with other high-trust nonprofit and community resources mentioned in the article.

Editorial note: This guide is produced based on our Editorial Standards using official and other high-trust sources, regularly updated and monitored, but not affiliated with any government agency and not a substitute for official agency guidance. Individual eligibility outcomes cannot be guaranteed.

Verification: Last verified 22 March 2026, next review July 2026.

Corrections: Please note that despite our careful verification process, errors may still occur. Email info@grantsforseniors.org with corrections and we respond within 72 hours.

Disclaimer: This article is informational only, not legal, financial, disability-rights, immigration, veterans-benefit, or government-agency advice. Program rules, policies, and availability can change. Confirm current details directly with the official program before acting.

About the Authors

Analic Mata-Murray

Analic Mata-Murray

Managing Editor

Analic Mata-Murray holds a Communications degree with a focus on Journalism and Advertising from Universidad Católica Andrés Bello. With over 11 years of experience as a volunteer translator for The Salvation Army, she has helped Spanish-speaking communities access critical resources and navigate poverty alleviation programs.

As Managing Editor at Grants for Seniors, Analic oversees all content to ensure accuracy and accessibility. Her bilingual expertise allows her to create and review content in both English and Spanish, specializing in community resources, housing assistance, and emergency aid programs.

Yolanda Taylor

Yolanda Taylor, BA Psychology

Senior Healthcare Editor

Yolanda Taylor is a Senior Healthcare Editor with over six years of clinical experience as a medical assistant in diverse healthcare settings, including OB/GYN, family medicine, and specialty clinics. She is currently pursuing her Bachelor's degree in Psychology at California State University, Sacramento.

At Grants for Seniors, Yolanda oversees healthcare-related content, ensuring medical accuracy and accessibility. Her clinical background allows her to translate complex medical terminology into clear guidance for seniors navigating Medicare, Medicaid, and dental care options. She is bilingual in Spanish and English and holds Lay Counselor certification and CPR/BLS certification.