Property Tax Credit
The Missouri circuit breaker is not the same as the county senior freeze.
Missouri's Property Tax Credit, often called the circuit breaker, is a state income-tax credit for certain senior citizens and 100 percent disabled individuals. It can apply to a portion of real estate taxes or rent paid, depending on eligibility and income. The official details live on the Missouri DOR Property Tax Credit page.
The headline maximums
The DOR page reviewed for this guide says the credit is up to $750 for renters and up to $1,100 for owners who owned and occupied their home. The actual amount depends on household income and qualifying tax or rent paid.
The facility-rent trap
If rent is paid to a facility that does not pay property taxes, DOR says the renter is not eligible for this credit. That is one of the small details worth checking before counting on the credit.
Where to start
Use DOR's current qualification chart and forms for the tax year you are filing. Do not use this guide as a substitute for the current form instructions.
Helpful next steps
What to check next
This state income-tax credit is useful, but it is not the same thing as a county senior freeze.
Sources and review
Where this information comes from
This page gives the short version, then points you back to the office or agency that controls the rule.
- Data used
- Missouri DOR Property Tax Credit information
- Last reviewed
- June 18, 2026
- Missouri DOR Property Tax Credit for circuit breaker credit for eligible seniors and 100 percent disabled individuals.
Use this carefully: The circuit breaker is an income-tax credit, not the county senior-freeze credit. Renters and homeowners use different maximums and forms.
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