Missouri · Infrastructure & Trust

Rainy Day Fund in Missouri

State rainy-day savings balance as a percent of annual general fund spending, as self-reported by states to NASBO.

6.8% in 2025

#45 of 50 · Bottom tier (higher is better)

Missouri is worse than the 50-state median (13%). That's a gap of 6.3%.

View interactive chart & trend → See full 50-state ranking →

2000 – 2025 · Missouri only · interactive chart with US median overlay →

About rainy day fund

What this measures: State rainy-day savings balance as a percent of annual general fund spending.

Why it matters: Rainy day funds are the buffer that keeps schools and services running through recessions without emergency tax hikes or cuts.

Watch out: Covers the named stabilization fund only. Some states keep additional reserves in other accounts that are not counted here.

Recent trend

YearMissouriUS median
20166.5%5.3%
20176.5%5.6%
20186.7%6.6%
20196.8%7.9%
20207.1%8.4%
20216.2%10%
20227.4%11%
20237.1%12%
20246.4%15%
20256.8%13%

Missouri vs. neighboring states

Same metric (rainy day fund), latest year with full state coverage. Click any name for that state's full report.

StateRainy Day FundNational rank
Iowa 10% #32 of 50
Illinois 4.3% #48 of 50
Kentucky 30% #5 of 50
Tennessee 9.3% #39 of 50
Arkansas 29% #6 of 50
Oklahoma 17% #16 of 50

How Missouri compares (2025)

Top 5 best

#1Wyoming8770%
#2Alaska4240%
#3Idaho4060%
#4North Dakota3780%
#5Kentucky3030%

Bottom 5

#46Rhode Island630%
#47Delaware500%
#48Illinois430%
#49Washington350%
#50New Jersey0.0%

Source and methodology

Source: NASBO Fiscal Survey · Direction: higher is better · Unit: %

Download raw CSV (all 50 states, all years)

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