MO Missouri Porch

St. Louis Region

County occupancy permits focus on unincorporated addresses

St. Louis County occupancy inspection rules apply to unincorporated County property, while many municipalities run their own local occupancy process.

A St. Louis mailing address does not answer the occupancy-permit question by itself. The first question is whether the property is in unincorporated St. Louis County or inside a municipality with its own local process.

County occupancy inspections focus on safety and health for properties in unincorporated St. Louis County. County zoning guidance uses the same kind of check: verify that the parcel is actually in unincorporated County before relying on County zoning.

For a buyer, renter, landlord, or agent, this is a boundary errand before it is a paperwork errand. Find the municipality first. If the address is unincorporated, use the County occupancy and zoning lanes. If it is inside a city, ask that city how its occupancy rules work.

References

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

Keep reading

Related local notes

More short, source-checked notes near this one.

Page feedback

See something off, missing, or unclear?

Send a quick note if a Missouri source, county office, local detail, or link needs a closer look.

Send a note