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Click on your state to view detailed FOIA guidance
Click on your state to view detailed FOIA guidance
Each state page includes: response deadlines, fee structures, special rights, exemptions, enforcement options, and success strategies
- Statute
- Mo. Code §610.023 et seq.
- Year Enacted
- 1970 (amended 2024)
- Response Deadline
- 3 business days
- Who Can Request
- Anyone
- Fees
- Yes
- Attorney Fees
- Recoverable if you win
- Enforcement
- Multiple mechanisms
Last verified: February 18, 2026
Use Missouri FOIA TemplateDefinition of Public Record
Records are defined by Missouri law as “any record, whether written or electronically stored, retained by or of any public governmental body including any report, survey, memorandum, or other document or study prepared for the public governmental body by a consultant or other professional service paid for in whole or in part by public funds, including records created or maintained by private contractors under an agreement with a public governmental body or on behalf of a public governmental body.”
Exemptions to Public Records
Personnel records, social security information, proprietary information in science or technology, personal financial information, law enforcement techniques and active cases, many kinds of medical records, scholastic information and sealed bids.
🔍 Search Common Exemptions
Exemption database for MO is being compiled. Check back soon!
Who Can Make a Request?
Anyone
Response Timeframe
3 days.
📅 Calculate Your Response Deadline
Information on Fees
Searches must be conducted in the most efficient way possible but searches can be charged for at actual cost of labor. Copying is charged for at actual cost of labor and the cost of the paper or electronic means used in duplication. Copy fees should not exceed 10 cents per page.
Enforcement Mechanisms
Any aggrieved person, any Missouri taxpayer or citizen, the Attorney General or prosecuting attorney may seek judicial enforcement of the Sunshine Law. Mo.Rev. Stat. § 610.027.1. The Attorney General takes a role in enforcing the Sunshine Law, including issuing opinions regarding the scope of the Law.148 The Attorney General is authorized to sue to enforce the Sunshine Law (Mo.Rev.Stat. § 610.027.1), but the office rarely initiates litigation, although it may file a brief as amicus curiae.
Attorney Fees
Yes, if you win your appeal in court.
🚀 Ready to Request Records?
Choose how you want to proceed with your MO public records request:
💡 Both options provide comprehensive, well-formatted requests based on MO transparency law.