Missouri church loans guide
How church loans work in Missouri
Rates, requirements, local regulations, and the market context for 7,800+ congregations across Missouri. Everything you need before you apply.
Church lending in Missouri
Missouri straddles Midwest and South, and Springfield, headquarters of the Assemblies of God, gives it outsized Pentecostal institutional weight. With about 7,800 churches statewide, Missouri’s market is shaped as much by its baptist tradition as by local real-estate costs, where loans typically land in the $650K-$2.8M range.
The denominational mix is led by Baptist congregations (34%), followed by Non-denom and Methodist communities. That blend shapes how Missouri applications are read, a fast-growing plant and a long-established congregation are underwritten on very different assumptions.
How MO compares
Average church loan size vs. the region
Who borrows in Missouri
The denominational mix shapes how lenders underwrite a MO application.
- Baptist34%
- Non-denom / Evangelical24%
- Methodist & Mainline12%
- Pentecostal12%
- Catholic10%
- Other8%
What Missouri requires
Lending license
Commercial church-loan brokering in Missouri generally requires a state lending or mortgage-broker license. ChurchLend is not a lender, it operates as a referral partner to licensed financing entities.
Property-tax exemption
Most Missouri churches qualify for a religious or charitable property-tax exemption. Keep exemption filings current through any refinance or construction event, it directly affects debt-service coverage.
Standard building code
Costs are stable and land is available; storm-resistant bracing is engineered into assembly occupancies.
Zoning & assembly use
Confirm local zoning allows assembly use and meets parking minimums early. In Kansas City and other Missouri metros this review is often the longest pole in a building timeline.
Missouri church loan FAQ
Key terms
- LTV
- Loan-to-value, the loan amount as a share of the property’s appraised value. Missouri lenders typically cap at 70-80%.
- DSCR
- Debt-service coverage ratio, annual net income ÷ annual loan payments. Lenders generally want 1.15-1.20× or better.
- Amortization
- The schedule over which a loan is repaid; church loans often amortize over 20-25 years with a shorter balloon.
- Balloon
- A lump-sum balance due at the end of a term shorter than the amortization, common in church lending at 5-10 years.
- Reserves
- Cash held against operating costs; most lenders look for 3-6 months on hand.
- Capital campaign
- A focused fundraising drive, often run before or alongside a loan to lower the amount borrowed.
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