MO Missouri Porch

New to Missouri

Your first month in Missouri, in order.

Short answer

The one hard deadline is titling your out-of-state vehicle within 30 days of becoming a resident. Get your driver license as soon as you settle in, watch the January 1 personal-property rule, and — only in the St. Louis area or the two earnings-tax cities — handle emissions and the local 1% tax. Enter your move-in date to see your dates.

Title-by deadline

Enter your date

30 days after your residency date to title your vehicle.

In the St. Louis emissions area?

City of St. Louis or Jefferson, St. Charles, or St. Louis County.

Living or working in KC or St. Louis City?

These two cities have a 1% earnings tax.

  1. Title & register your out-of-state vehicle

    Within 30 days of becoming a Missouri resident

    Missing the window adds a late penalty of $25 for the first 30 days plus $25 per additional 30 days, capped at $200 (RSMo 301.190).

  2. Get a personal-property tax waiver (Statement of Non-Assessment)

    Before you register — if you were not a Missouri resident this January 1

    Get it from your county (or City of St. Louis) assessor by showing your out-of-state title or registration. It is the in-lieu document used to register a vehicle your first year.

  3. Pass a Missouri safety inspection — unless your vehicle is exempt

    Before titling — an inspection must be no more than 60 days old

    Vehicles within the first 10 model years AND under 150,000 miles are exempt. Otherwise you need a current safety inspection.

  4. Pass an emissions test

    Before titling — no more than 60 days old

    Only for vehicles registered in the City of St. Louis or Jefferson, St. Charles, or St. Louis counties (the Gateway Vehicle Inspection Program). It does not apply elsewhere in Missouri.

  5. Get a Missouri driver license

    As soon as you establish residency

    There is no fixed day-count for a standard license (commercial CDLs must transfer within 30 days). With a valid out-of-state license the road test is usually waived; you still take the vision and road-sign tests. Choose REAL ID or non-REAL ID.

  6. Register to vote

    Postmarked by the 4th Wednesday before an election

    Register by mail, in person, or online through the Missouri Secretary of State.

  7. Know the January 1 personal-property rule

    Each January 1, going forward

    Missouri taxes what you owned on January 1. Declare your vehicles with the county assessor, and keep the paid receipt — you need it to renew your plates.

  8. Plan for the 1% earnings tax

    Ongoing once you live or work there

    Kansas City and the City of St. Louis each levy a 1% earnings tax. It applies only in those two cities — residents pay on all earned income, and non-residents pay on income earned in the city.

Deadlines and documents can vary by county and license office. Confirm with the Missouri Department of Revenue and your county before you go. This is general information, not legal advice.

Helpful next steps

What to check next

Dig into the pieces that apply to you.

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 new-resident deadlines from the Department of Revenue, Secretary of State, and RSMo (titling, inspection, personal property, voter registration)
Last reviewed
June 18, 2026

Use this carefully: Deadlines and required documents can vary by county and license office, and the emissions area and earnings tax apply only to specific places. The 30-day deadline is for titling your vehicle (and CDL transfers) — a standard driver license has no fixed day-count. Confirm with the Department of Revenue and your county before you go.

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