Who Owns the Rainwater? Navigating Missouri’s Water Rights and Conservation Laws

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Who Owns the Rainwater? Navigating Missouri's Water Rights and Conservation Laws

Missouri landowners own the rainwater falling on their property and can harvest it freely under state law, with no riparian or prior appropriation restrictions like in Western states.​

Rainwater Harvesting Rights

Revised Statutes of Missouri § 640.648 (effective 2018) explicitly affirms the right to install and use rainwater collection systems anywhere on private land, including city limits, for both potable and non-potable uses, without forcing connection to public water supplies. No state permit is required, though local ordinances may impose basic rules on system design, like overflow drainage; cities like Springfield offer rebates up to $300 for installations after February 2026.​

Conservation Laws

Missouri promotes harvesting via the Department of Natural Resources as low-impact development to cut stormwater runoff, with no volume caps or usage limits beyond general pollution controls. Water rights follow riparian doctrine—reasonable use of surface/groundwater on one’s land—unaffected by rainwater capture, unlike states restricting diversions.​

SOURCES

[1](https://www.ntotank.com/blog/rainwater-harvesting-laws-regulations-and-rights-by-us-state)
[2](https://law.justia.com/codes/missouri/title-xl/chapter-640/section-640-648/)
[3](https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/rainwater-collection-legal-states)
[4](https://www.lawnstarter.com/blog/landscaping/rainwater-harvesting-guidelines-by-state/)
[5](https://www.facebook.com/william.doughty.785489/posts/in-missouri-collecting-rainwater-is-completely-legal-and-actually-encouragedther/3979723658963989/)

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