Tenant Mold Rights

Buying or Selling a Home With Mold in Missouri: Disclosure Guide

Heads up: Missouri is largely a caveat emptor state for residential real estate. There is no broad statutory mandate for the seller to disclose every known defect, including mold, but sellers cannot actively conceal a known problem or lie in response to a direct question. The fastest way to protect yourself as a buyer is a thorough inspection plus written questions to the seller about prior water damage and mold.

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Missouri does not have a comprehensive statutory seller disclosure mandate; Real Estate Commission rules require licensees to use a Seller's Disclosure Statement.
State
Missouri

Last reviewed: May 6, 2026

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This page is informational, not legal advice. Real estate disclosure rules vary by state and by the type of transaction. Read the cited statute or commission rule directly, talk to a Missouri real estate attorney, and use the official disclosure form for your specific transaction.

Does Missouri require a seller to disclose mold?

Missouri is largely a caveat emptor state for private residential real estate transactions. Sellers do not have a broad statutory duty to volunteer information about defects, including mold, unless asked directly or unless they have actively concealed the condition.

The closest statutory or regulatory framework is Missouri does not have a comprehensive statutory seller disclosure mandate; Real Estate Commission rules require licensees to use a Seller’s Disclosure Statement..

Even in caveat emptor states, sellers cannot:

  • Actively conceal a known defect (covering mold-stained drywall with paint just before listing, for example).
  • Lie in response to a direct question from the buyer.
  • Misrepresent the property’s condition in marketing materials.

Missouri does not have a broad statutory seller disclosure law; the Missouri Real Estate Commission requires licensees to use a disclosure form.

Read more at revisor.mo.gov.

What buyers should know in Missouri

If you are buying a home in Missouri, treat the seller’s disclosure as the starting point, not the answer. Do an independent home inspection, and if the inspector flags water staining, musty smell, or visible mold, get a separate mold assessment from a qualified inspector. Ask the seller in writing whether the property has had: water intrusion or flooding, prior mold testing or remediation, an active insurance claim related to water or mold, or any documented HVAC mold problems. Save the responses. In a caveat emptor state like Missouri, the inspection and the written questions matter even more, because the seller’s silence is not as actionable after closing as it would be in a statutory-disclosure state.

What sellers should do in Missouri

If you are selling a home in Missouri, the safest position is to disclose what you know. If you have ever had visible mold, water damage, an HVAC mold problem, prior remediation, or an active insurance claim involving water or mold, write it down on the disclosure form (or in writing to the buyer if your state does not use a form). Keep records of any remediation: who did the work, when, and the post-remediation verification. Even in a caveat emptor state like Missouri, active concealment and outright misrepresentation are not protected. The cheap version of full disclosure (a few extra paragraphs in writing) is far cheaper than a post-closing lawsuit.

What if mold is discovered after closing?

In every state, the question of post-closing remedies depends on the specific facts: was the defect actually known to the seller, was it concealed, did the seller mark “no” or “unknown” on a disclosure form when they should have answered “yes,” and how material was the defect. Common claim theories include:

  • Fraudulent concealment. Available in nearly every state, including caveat emptor states. Requires showing the seller actively hid the condition.
  • Misrepresentation on the disclosure form. Easier to prove in states with a statutory disclosure form, because the form locks in the seller’s representation.
  • Breach of contract. If the purchase contract had specific representations about the property’s condition.
  • Real estate professional liability. Listing brokers and licensees in some states have independent disclosure duties.

These claims have specific statutes of limitations, often shorter than the general fraud limit. Talk to a Missouri real estate attorney quickly if you discover post-closing mold and suspect concealment or misrepresentation.

How this pairs with Missouri’s other mold rules

Talk to a mold pro in Missouri

If you are buying a home in Missouri and the inspection turned up mold, or you are selling and want a remediation done before listing, call 866-871-0209. We will connect you with a Missouri mold pro for a no-obligation phone consultation.

Disclaimer

Mold disclosure laws change. The statute or rule cited above is the controlling authority on the legislature’s or commission’s website; that version, not this summary, governs. Talk to a Missouri real estate attorney before relying on a specific procedure or remedy described here.

Mold remediation pages for Missouri cities

Each city page below has local mold remediation context, climate factors, and licensed-contractor guidance for that specific area.

View all Missouri mold remediation cities →

Once you have authorization to remediate, call 866-871-0209.
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