Missouri runs 388 rural school districts and 45 suburban ones. They operate under the same laws, the same funding formula, and the same $40,000 starting-salary floor — and they offer teachers two very different careers. This page puts the gaps side by side: pay, benefits, wealth, effort, and the parts of the story that don’t fit the stereotype.
Before the numbers, the geography. Every one of Missouri’s 516 districts is colored by the kind of place it serves. Tick a box on the map to isolate one type — watch what happens to the state when you show only the 45 suburban districts, and then only the 388 rural ones.
Each rung shows the median published salary schedule against the suburban median (the navy ring). The state set the bottom of every ladder at $40,000 — it did not touch the top. Pick a comparison and watch where the gap lives.
| Schedule benchmark | Rural | Town | Urban | All | Suburb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BA, starting step | $40,000 | $41,412 | $45,959 | $40,000 | $45,679 |
| MA + 10 years | $46,000 | $51,078 | $59,184 | $46,800 | $60,454 |
| Top of MA lane | $56,000 | $67,250 | $78,590 | $58,213 | $85,112 |
| Schedule maximum | $58,700 | $72,975 | $88,842 | $62,040 | $98,009 |
Medians of published district salary schedules, MNEA 2025–26 salary report, joined to NCES locale (388 rural, 69 town, 45 suburb, 14 city districts; urban = NCES “City”). Schedules are offers, not payroll. The $40,000 BA floor is statutory (SB 727); most rural districts reach it with state baseline-grant aid.
The pay gap is not a choice rural communities are making. The median rural district levies a higher operating tax rate than the median suburb — on a fraction of the tax base, in communities with double the child poverty.
The median rural district levies an operating rate of $3.60 against the median suburb’s $3.40 — a higher rate on roughly 25% less property wealth per student ($125,929 per ADA against $168,011), in communities with about double the child poverty.
Read together, those figures say the rural–suburban gap is not produced by rural communities choosing to tax themselves less. They are taxing themselves more and collecting less, because the rate is applied to a smaller base. That is a fact about the tax base, not about local will.
These are medians across districts, each weighted equally — not a causal claim, and not a statement about any individual district. A high levy does not prove a community is straining, and a low one does not prove it is not: a wealthy district can raise a great deal at a modest rate. And a comparison of typical districts is not a comparison of typical students, since Missouri’s rural districts are many and small while its suburban districts are few and large.
Salary schedules are public; benefits hide in board minutes. The MSTA survey asks every district what it actually provides. The suburban compensation advantage extends well past the salary schedule.
Missouri teacher pensions (PSRS) are computed from your final average salary — roughly 2.5% of your highest consecutive years’ pay, times your years of service, every year for the rest of your life. That design turns the career-ceiling gap above into a lifetime gap: a salary difference at the END of a career reprices EVERY year of it. And because your rural years count fully toward a pension computed on a suburban final salary, the system quietly rewards finishing your career where pay is highest.
The schedule’s architecture pushes the same direction: only 260 of 518 districts participate in Career Ladder and just 76 pay for National Board certification — and the extra lanes that reward an EdS or doctorate thin out fast outside the metros (rural schedules multiply starting pay by 1.46 over a career; suburban schedules by 2.15). Life factors compound it: suburban communities offer a deeper job market for a teacher’s spouse (34% of adults hold degrees vs 17% rural) and better broadband (92% vs 82%). The fair counterweights: rural housing costs substantially less, classes are smaller, the four-day week is real compensation, and community ties hold many teachers for whole careers — the flight is a mid-career phenomenon, arriving when the ceiling starts to bind and family finances peak.
A fair comparison names what cuts the other way. These four facts don’t erase the gaps above — but any honest page carries them.
One more trajectory worth holding in mind: since 1991 the median rural district has lost 19.2% of its enrollment while the median suburb grew 9.5%. Every gap on this page lands on communities that are also carrying decline — which is precisely why the strongest rural schedules cluster where wind farms and power plants prop up the tax base, and why the four-day week (see that page) reads as a recruiting tool for districts that cannot compete on the schedule itself.