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Things to know about St. Louis:

The City of St. Louis is a separate entity from St. Louis county. When I last checked the employee map for a 150 engineer software company, there were two employees living in the City of St. Louis, (a receptionist, and a newly divorced man in an apartment) the remainder where in St. Louis County, St. Charles County, and living on the "east side" in Illinois (but far enough to clear East St. Louis).

The City of St. Louis has a 1% payroll tax for people that work in the city, plus another 1% for people that live in the city. That may not be important for a startup, but if you are looking to long term employ a lot of highly paid people you have to ask yourself if you want an extra 2% margin or not.

There has been a fair amount of redevelopment in the city itself in recent years, and probably a large amount to come, so you can find a nice place. Make sure to check for a grocery store nearby. Public transit is next to useless. Prepare to drive.

The radial highways in and out of the city are in pretty good shape these days. Check the actually commute times, but 20 miles in 30 minutes wouldn't be outrageous.



St Louis has a city income tax?!


1% earnings tax if you either live in the city or work in the city. (If you both live and work in the city, it's still 1%)

Frankly, I don't mind paying it. The city is entering a tricky time where it's got some momentum going with a lot of young people, a up-and-coming arts scene, more and more local businesses. If it puts the money to good use, there's hope for revitalizing the city core.


It's not the rate that is unattractive. It's having to deal with yet another income tax bureaucracy.


Fear not. Your payroll company takes care of it. There are no forms for employees.


Technically, an "earnings" tax and applies to net profits too: http://www.slpl.lib.mo.us/cco/code/data/t0522.htm


St. Louis isn't the only one. A lot (the vast majority i believe) of cities in Ohio also have a municipal income tax. So yes, living in Ohio, you file a Federal, State and Municipal income tax return.


Why would anyone base a company out of St. Louis?

New York gets away with this because it's NYC.

But STL competes with bigger, better cities that have no city earnings tax: Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison, Kansas City KS, Overland Park, Des Moines, Memphis. The only nearby cities that have earnings/income taxes are KCMO and Indy.

City taxes baffle me.


There's a growing contingent in the city, too. I know a lot of folks in the Cherokee neighborhood, including the dev group Able Few and across the street in Nebula, the coworking space. That's where I am on the weekend ;) I live downtown, btw.




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