MO Missouri Porch

Central Missouri / Missouri River Corridor

Right-to-farm, fences, and livestock rules in a row-crop county

In a heavily agricultural county, fence-law and right-to-farm questions shape disputes between neighbors and the expectations of anyone buying rural land next to working farms.

Moniteau County grows a lot of corn and soybeans and raises livestock. So if you live on rural land here, or want to buy some, farm rules matter to you. Missouri has a “fence law.” It sets who must pay for and keep up a fence on the line between two properties. Missouri also has “right-to-farm” rules. These protect farms that have run for a while from some neighbor complaints about normal farm work. Counties follow one of two fence rules: the general state rule, or a “local-option” rule. Which one applies changes how neighbors split fence costs. The simple takeaway: living next to a working farm comes with legal rules about fences, livestock, and everyday farm activity. University of Missouri Extension explains fence law in plain words. Before you assume, confirm which fence-law option applies in Moniteau County with the local office.

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Where this fits: this note belongs to Moniteau County. See every local note for the county on its page.

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