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Sugar Creek, Missouri eviction risk overview
City brief · 3,249 residents

Sugar Creek, MO Eviction Risk: MODERATE

Jackson County · Population 3,249

In 2026
Risk score
5
MODERATE

97th percentile, Missouri.

50-yr Eviction Risk Score history

1976 to 2026 · climbing fast since 2010

Min2.1 Average3.2 Now5
10 5 1976 · score 2.6 1977 · score 2.6 1978 · score 2.6 1979 · score 2.6 1980 · score 2.4 1981 · score 2.4 1982 · score 2.5 1983 · score 2.4 1984 · score 2.1 1985 · score 2.1 1986 · score 2.1 1987 · score 2.1 1988 · score 2.6 1989 · score 2.6 1990 · score 2.7 1991 · score 2.8 1992 · score 3.2 1993 · score 3.3 1994 · score 3.3 1995 · score 3.3 1996 · score 3.2 1997 · score 3.3 1998 · score 3.3 1999 · score 3.3 2000 · score 3.2 2001 · score 3.3 2002 · score 3.3 2003 · score 3.4 2004 · score 2.8 2005 · score 2.9 2006 · score 2.9 2007 · score 3.0 2008 · score 3.4 2009 · score 3.5 2010 · score 3.5 2011 · score 3.6 2012 · score 3.3 2013 · score 3.3 2014 · score 3.4 2015 · score 3.4 2016 · score 3.3 2017 · score 3.5 2018 · score 3.6 2019 · score 3.7 2020 · score 4.3 2021 · score 4.3 2022 · score 4.2 2023 · score 4.2 2024 · score 4.2 2025 · score 5.4 2026 · score 5.0

Key metrics

Time machine

Scrub 50 years

2026
● LIVE · today ◀ REPLAY · historical

Nine-axis profile

9-axis profile · today

Shape of the risk surface

1 landlord · 10 tenant
Local 6.5 Regional 6.5 State 2.1 Economic 6.5 Supply 6.0 Rent Control 2.4 Eviction 2.3 Tenant 6.7 Housing 4.0 5 MODERATE
Sub-scores · with sparkline

Where the score comes from

1 → 10 scale
  1. Local political climate
    Dem margin +19.3% (2024)
    6.5
  2. Regional political climate
    County-weighted neighbor mix
    6.5
  3. State political climate
    Missouri legislature & governorship
    2.1
  4. Economic stress
    10.7% poverty · 6.2% unemp.
    6.5
  5. Supply constraint
    $1,155 average · 25.3% renters
    6.0
  6. Rent Control risk
    21.3% of income on rent
    2.4
  7. Eviction process difficulty
    37 days filing → judgment
    2.3
  8. Tenant organizing strength
    25.3% renters
    6.7
  9. Housing court bias
    County bench composition
    4.0
Geographic context

Risk heat across Sugar Creek and the region

Click any city to see its score

How Sugar Creek compares

Risk score vs. peers, county, state, and the U.S.
Rank in Jackson County
Moderate
#10 of 18 cities
Rank in county, 47th percentileBottomTop
#10 of 18 cities in Jackson County for landlord eviction risk.
Rank in Missouri
Very High
#42 of 1,082 cities
Rank in state, 96th percentileBottomTop
#42 of 1,082 cities in Missouri for landlord eviction risk.
vs. county · state · U.S.
Sugar Creek risk score vs. county / state / U.S.Sugar Creek: 5.05.0Sugar CreekThis cityCounty: 4.94.9Countyavg in countyState: 3.93.9Stateavg in stateU.S.: 5.25.2U.S.national avg
Score story

Six-stop tour of the risk profile

  1. 5
    / 10 · MODERATE
    The verdict

    A Moderate-tier market.

    Composite 5/10. Mid-range market; standard documentation usually wins. The 50-year curve shows a sharp climb.

    50-yr trend+2.4 over 50 yr
    197620012026

    Steepening since 2010 · COVID inflection visible

  2. 37d
    Typical timeline
    The money

    What renting (and evicting) looks like.

    Rent published at $1,155/mo. A contested eviction takes 37 days and costs $1,201-$3,012 per case.

    50-yr trendCalendar drag rising since '15
    197620012026

    Court-clerk data lands in the next release.

  3. 25.3%
    Renters
    The renters

    Who you'll be renting to.

    Out of 3,249 residents, 25.3% rent. 21% are spending 30%+ income on rent, 10.7% below the poverty line.

    50-yr trendRenter share rising
    197620012026

    ACS 1970-present · once the migration overlay is in.

  4. 6.5
    Local + regional
    The politics

    Mid-range climate. Not a coastal market.

    Local & regional political climate score 6.5 and 6.5 (Dem margin +19.3% (2024)). State climate at 2.1, a mid-range statehouse.

    50-yr trendTracks county vote margin
    197620012026

    Built on 50-yr presidential margins back to 1976.

  5. 2.1
    State politics
    The process

    Moderate calendar, moderate friction.

    State political climate 2.1/10 sets the legislative ceiling for landlord remedies, and it shows up in the process. Eviction process difficulty reads 2.3, housing court bias 4, rent-control risk 2.4. Standard process speed for the state.

    50-yr trendProcess difficulty +-2.7 since '00
    197620012026

    Court-clerk data lands in the next release.

  6. 6.5
    Economic stress
    The stress

    Economic pressure is the background risk.

    Economic stress: 6.5. Supply constraint: 6. The numbers behind those: 10.7% poverty, 6.2% unemployment, 21% of income on rent.

    50-yr trendTwo visible dips · '08 + COVID
    197620012026

    Mirrors BLS unemployment series.

US eviction landscape · timeline × all-in cost

Sugar Creek sits in the quick & cheap quadrant

Bubble size = population · color = risk score
QUICK BUT COSTLY fast docket · high all-in loss SLOW & EXPENSIVE long calendar · high all-in loss QUICK & CHEAP fast docket · low all-in loss SLOW BUT CHEAP long calendar · low all-in loss 30d 50d 75d 100d 150d 200d 300d 450d $2.0k $3.0k $5.0k $7.5k $10k $15k $20k $30k EVICTION TIMELINE (DAYS) → ↑ ALL-IN COST (LOG SCALE) Kansas City, MO · 40d · ~$2.5k all-in ($63/day) · score 4.7 Kansas City Independence, MO · 43d · ~$2.3k all-in ($52/day) · score 5.3 Independence Lee's Summit, MO · 41d · ~$2.4k all-in ($59/day) · score 5.2 Lee's Summit St. Joseph, MO · 41d · ~$2.3k all-in ($57/day) · score 3.1 St. Joseph Blue Springs, MO · 37d · ~$2.5k all-in ($67/day) · score 5.1 Blue Springs St. Louis, MO · 43d · ~$2.4k all-in ($56/day) · score 5.4 St. Louis Springfield, MO · 38d · ~$3.8k all-in ($99/day) · score 2.8 Springfield Columbia, MO · 42d · ~$4.4k all-in ($104/day) · score 3.5 Columbia O'Fallon, MO · 37d · ~$2.2k all-in ($60/day) · score 3.7 O'Fallon St. Charles, MO · 36d · ~$2.5k all-in ($68/day) · score 3.3 St. Charles Houston, TX · 24d · ~$2.5k all-in ($103/day) · score 2.7 Houston Phoenix, AZ · 38d · ~$3.3k all-in ($86/day) · score 3.9 Phoenix Memphis, TN · 31d · ~$2.0k all-in ($66/day) · score 4.6 Memphis Atlanta, GA · 40d · ~$2.8k all-in ($69/day) · score 5.5 Atlanta Boston, MA · 187d · ~$20.3k all-in ($109/day) · score 6.8 Boston Chicago, IL · 109d · ~$9.0k all-in ($82/day) · score 6.3 Chicago New York, NY · 417d · ~$29.5k all-in ($71/day) · score 9.8 New York Seattle, WA · 162d · ~$12.7k all-in ($79/day) · score 6.2 Seattle Sugar Creek
Sugar Creek · 37d · ~$2.1k all-in ($57/day) · score 5 National average: 58d · $4.6k all-in Hover any bubble for stats · click to open Color: 0-4   4-7   7-10
00Overview

About eviction risk in Sugar Creek, MO

Landlording in Sugar Creek, Missouri, presents a manageable operating environment for documented landlords. The Eviction Risk Score is 5/10 (MODERATE tier), drawn from the nine sub-axes shown above, covering rent-control exposure, eviction-process difficulty, housing-court bias, tenant-organizing strength, supply constraint, economic stress, and local, regional, and state political climate. This is not a quick-fix market: it's a Mid-tier market where lease drafting, screening discipline, and well-documented notices materially change outcomes.

Sugar Creek is a city of 3,249 residents where 25.3% of occupied units are renter-occupied, and the typical renter spends 21.3% of income on rent. At an average rent of $1,155/month, the typical renter household here spends more than the federal 30% threshold on housing, a leading indicator of payment volatility and a precondition for the kinds of tenant defenses that show up most often in housing court.

01Process

How Sugar Creek eviction process actually works

Eviction process difficulty here reads 2.3/10, a number that combines statutory complexity (notice categories, just-cause rules, mandatory pre-filing disclosures) with operational realities (court calendar length and clerk responsiveness). The typical contested filing in Sugar Creek closes 37 days after the initial notice. For non-payment of rent the first step is a properly-formatted, properly-served pay-or-quit notice; for material lease breaches it's a cure-or-quit; for tenancies under just-cause protection an at-fault grounds notice (or a no-fault notice with statutory relocation assistance) is required.

The slow part of Sugar Creek's timeline is usually the calendar, not the motion practice. Housing court bias scores 4/10 here, meaning judges read borderline procedural defects in the tenant's favor more often than the national norm. The practical implication: every notice and every proof of service needs to be airtight before it gets filed.

02Cost

What it costs (and how long it takes)

An all-in eviction in Sugar Creek runs $1,201 to $3,012 per case once you account for filing fees, attorney time, lost rent during pendency, sheriff lockout, and unit turnover. That range is wide because the upper bound assumes a tenant answer plus motion practice, common when housing court bias is high. The lower bound assumes a default judgment after proper service.

For landlords running the numbers on holding costs vs. cash-for-keys: if your projected timeline times your monthly rent already exceeds the high-end cost number, cash-for-keys at 1-2 months' rent is typically the economically rational choice. With 37 days of typical timeline and $1,155/month in lost rent, that crossover happens fast here.

03Operations

Security deposits, screening, and lease terms

Tenant organizing strength scores 6.7/10 in Sugar Creek, and the city has limited rent control exposure (2.4/10). Operations practice that survives audit in this environment looks like:

  • Screening discipline. Document income (verified at 2.5 to 3x rent), credit (with a clear minimum), and prior-tenancy reference checks, but do not screen on protected categories or source-of-income where banned. Keep a written, consistent screening criteria document for every applicant.
  • Lease specificity. Use a state-specific lease that names every term clearly: rent due date, late fees within statutory caps, deposit handling, smoke and CO disclosure, lead paint disclosure (pre-1978 stock), and a clean attorney's-fees clause.
  • Security deposit handling. Itemize deductions within the statutory window. Photograph move-in/move-out condition. In Missouri, deposit cap and refund window are statute, so exceed them at your own risk.
  • Mid-tenancy documentation. Keep date-stamped records of every rent receipt, every habitability request, every notice served. The day you need them in court is too late to start.
04Strategy

What an everyday landlord should actually do here

If you own one to four units in Sugar Creek: hire a property manager who knows the local court. The pricing differential between self-managing and hiring out is small relative to the cost of one botched eviction in a MODERATE tier market. If you own five or more: build relationships with a local landlord-side attorney before you need one, since retainer fees are negligible compared to emergency-rate billing when an eviction is already moving.

The avoidable mistakes here are all upstream of the filing: weak screening, an informal lease, sloppy rent receipts, and notice templates pulled off the internet that don't match Missouri's statutory language. Fix those four, and most cases settle or default. Skip them, and a $3,012 all-in fight is the realistic worst case.

04bPractical traps

Local traps to avoid in Sugar Creek

Trap · 25.3%
25.3% renter share against 3,249 residents produces roughly 822 rental occupants in Sugar Creek. Jackson County voted D 22.0% in 2020. Eviction filings tend to cluster in the multifamily rental corridor.
04Eviction filings

Live filings tracking · Eviction Lab

Princeton Eviction Lab Tracking System, county-level. Last update 2026-05-01.

In the most recent month, 663 eviction cases were filed across the tracker's coverage area, 0.74× the historical baseline (below baseline). Past 12 months: 10,111 filings. Pandemic-era cumulative: 55,088.

  • 663Past month
  • 10,111Past 12 months
  • 0.74×vs baseline (past mo)
Notice requirement: at least ten days notice (for nonpayment of rent cases, though in other cases more). Filing fee: minimum filing fee of $89 filing fee.
Last 36 months of filings 2023-05-01 - 2026-04-01
Monthly eviction filings (Eviction Lab tracker)2023-05-01: 1,047 filings (1.05× hist)2023-06-01: 1,038 filings (1.08× hist)2023-07-01: 974 filings (0.99× hist)2023-08-01: 993 filings (1.03× hist)2023-09-01: 933 filings (1.00× hist)2023-10-01: 1,101 filings (1.11× hist)2023-11-01: 886 filings (1.02× hist)2023-12-01: 774 filings (0.97× hist)2024-01-01: 886 filings (1.00× hist)2024-02-01: 945 filings (0.99× hist)2024-03-01: 811 filings (0.93× hist)2024-04-01: 854 filings (0.95× hist)2024-05-01: 952 filings (0.95× hist)2024-06-01: 882 filings (0.92× hist)2024-07-01: 988 filings (1.01× hist)2024-08-01: 934 filings (0.97× hist)2024-09-01: 940 filings (1.00× hist)2024-10-01: 891 filings (0.90× hist)2024-11-01: 847 filings (0.98× hist)2024-12-01: 823 filings (1.03× hist)2025-01-01: 869 filings (0.98× hist)2025-02-01: 817 filings (0.88× hist)2025-03-01: 763 filings (0.88× hist)2025-04-01: 839 filings (0.93× hist)2025-05-01: 870 filings (0.87× hist)2025-06-01: 792 filings (0.83× hist)2025-07-01: 999 filings (1.02× hist)2025-08-01: 974 filings (1.01× hist)2025-09-01: 916 filings (0.98× hist)2025-10-01: 929 filings (0.93× hist)2025-11-01: 709 filings (0.82× hist)2025-12-01: 835 filings (1.05× hist)2026-01-01: 802 filings (0.91× hist)2026-02-01: 828 filings (0.89× hist)2026-03-01: 794 filings (0.91× hist)2026-04-01: 663 filings (0.74× hist)
Filings dropped 24% over the past 12 months.
05FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Q1

What if my tenant claims the property has issues and stops paying rent?

In Missouri, tenants generally cannot withhold rent for repairs without a court order, unless the lease specifically allows it or the landlord agrees. This is not a "repair and deduct" state in the same way some others are. If they stop paying, follow the eviction process. Document any repair requests and your responses thoroughly. If you ignore legitimate repair issues, it could complicate your case, but it doesn't automatically excuse non-payment.

Q2

Can I evict a tenant in Sugar Creek without a reason?

For month-to-month leases, yes, you can terminate with a 30-day notice without needing to state a specific "reason," as long as it's not discriminatory or retaliatory. For fixed-term leases, you can only evict if the tenant violates a term of the lease, such as non-payment of rent or significant damage to the property. Missouri does not have statewide just-cause eviction requirements.

Q3

How long do I have to return a security deposit in Sugar Creek?

You have 30 days from the date the tenant moves out to return the security deposit or provide an itemized list of deductions. Failing to meet this deadline can mean you lose your right to keep any portion of the deposit, regardless of actual damages. Keep detailed records and photographs of the property's condition both before and after the tenancy.

Q4

What if my tenant abandons the property?

Missouri law has specific procedures for handling abandoned property. Generally, you need to send a notice to the tenant's last known address, giving them a certain amount of time to reclaim their belongings. If they don't, you can dispose of or sell the property. Do not immediately assume abandonment and clear out the unit; follow the legal steps to avoid liability. Consult an attorney if you're unsure.

Q5

Is there rent control in Sugar Creek or Missouri?

No, Missouri state law prohibits rent control. This means landlords in Sugar Creek are generally free to set market rates for rent and increase rent as allowed by the lease agreement and proper notice periods. You can review our Missouri rent control rules for more details.

Q6

Can I screen tenants based on their source of income?

Missouri does not have statewide source-of-income protection. This means you can consider an applicant's source of income (e.g., employment, disability, Section 8 voucher) as part of your overall screening process, as long as your screening criteria are applied consistently and non-discriminatorily. Focus on their ability to pay the rent consistently and reliably.

06Score

What this score means for landlords2

A 5/10 places Sugar Creek in the 97th percentile of Missouri cities on the Eviction Risk Score index. The score is the average of the nine sub-axes, all calibrated on a national 1 to 10 scale where 1 is most landlord-friendly and 10 is most tenant-protective. The 50-year reconstruction shows this score has risen sharply since 1976, a structural drift driven by court-calendar growth, rent-control adoption, and the rise of tenant-side legal aid. The trajectory matters more than the snapshot: the score is the climate, not the weather.