Missouri mosquito forecast, by town

A daily mosquito bite-risk score for all 938 Missouri towns, grouped by their 115 counties. Mosquito pressure is local, so pick your town for today's number, a 7-day outlook, and what's driving it.

Adair County · 5 towns

Andrew County · 8 towns

Atchison County · 5 towns

Audrain County · 8 towns

Barry County · 11 towns

Barton County · 6 towns

Bates County · 10 towns

Benton County · 4 towns

Bollinger County · 3 towns

Boone County · 11 towns

Buchanan County · 6 towns

Butler County · 4 towns

Caldwell County · 7 towns

Callaway County · 6 towns

Camden County · 7 towns

Cape Girardeau County · 9 towns

Carroll County · 7 towns

Carter County · 3 towns

Cass County · 20 towns

Cedar County · 4 towns

Chariton County · 8 towns

Christian County · 8 towns

Clark County · 6 towns

Clay County · 20 towns

Clinton County · 6 towns

Cole County · 8 towns

Cooper County · 8 towns

Crawford County · 6 towns

Dade County · 6 towns

Dallas County · 3 towns

Daviess County · 8 towns

DeKalb County · 7 towns

Dent County · 1 towns

Douglas County · 1 towns

Dunklin County · 10 towns

Franklin County · 13 towns

Gasconade County · 6 towns

Gentry County · 6 towns

Greene County · 8 towns

Grundy County · 6 towns

Harrison County · 8 towns

Henry County · 9 towns

Hickory County · 5 towns

Holt County · 9 towns

Howard County · 5 towns

Howell County · 4 towns

Iron County · 6 towns

Jackson County · 18 towns

Jasper County · 22 towns

Jefferson County · 15 towns

Johnson County · 7 towns

Knox County · 6 towns

Laclede County · 4 towns

Lafayette County · 14 towns

Lawrence County · 10 towns

Lewis County · 6 towns

Lincoln County · 12 towns

Linn County · 8 towns

Livingston County · 6 towns

Macon County · 9 towns

Madison County · 4 towns

Maries County · 2 towns

Marion County · 2 towns

McDonald County · 8 towns

Mercer County · 3 towns

Miller County · 8 towns

Mississippi County · 6 towns

Moniteau County · 5 towns

Monroe County · 5 towns

Montgomery County · 9 towns

Morgan County · 6 towns

New Madrid County · 14 towns

Newton County · 19 towns

Nodaway County · 15 towns

Oregon County · 3 towns

Osage County · 6 towns

Ozark County · 3 towns

Pemiscot County · 10 towns

Perry County · 4 towns

Pettis County · 6 towns

Phelps County · 5 towns

Pike County · 8 towns

Platte County · 17 towns

Polk County · 8 towns

Pulaski County · 5 towns

Putnam County · 5 towns

Ralls County · 4 towns

Randolph County · 8 towns

Ray County · 12 towns

Reynolds County · 3 towns

Ripley County · 2 towns

Saline County · 12 towns

Schuyler County · 5 towns

Scotland County · 5 towns

Scott County · 13 towns

Shannon County · 3 towns

Shelby County · 6 towns

St. Charles County · 16 towns

St. Clair County · 7 towns

St. Francois County · 8 towns

St. Louis County · 87 towns

St. Louis city County · 1 towns

Ste. Genevieve County · 3 towns

Stoddard County · 9 towns

Stone County · 10 towns

Sullivan County · 8 towns

Taney County · 8 towns

Texas County · 6 towns

Vernon County · 12 towns

Warren County · 8 towns

Washington County · 4 towns

Wayne County · 4 towns

Webster County · 6 towns

Worth County · 6 towns

Wright County · 4 towns

Missouri mosquito questions

What kinds of mosquitoes live in Missouri?
Missouri has floodwater mosquitoes (the dominant summer nuisance biter, which surges after heavy rain), the Asian tiger mosquito (a daytime biter that breeds in yard containers), the house mosquito (the main West Nile carrier), and swamp and cattail-marsh mosquitoes tied to the EEE cycle. Which ones dominate a given town depends on its local breeding habitat.
When does mosquito season start and end in Missouri?
In Missouri, mosquito numbers build from about mid-June, peak in mid-to-late summer, and fade with the first cool nights of fall. Biting largely stops once temperatures drop below about 50°F, and a hard freeze ends the season.
Is West Nile or EEE a risk in Missouri?
Both West Nile virus and Eastern equine encephalitis occur in the region, but human cases are rare. West Nile risk peaks in late-summer heat and tracks the house mosquito in developed areas; EEE rises after mid-July in swampy areas. For confirmed local activity, check the Missouri health department's arbovirus surveillance.
How do I keep mosquitoes out of my yard in Missouri?
The single biggest thing you control is standing water: empty anything that holds it, keep gutters clear, and change bird baths weekly. Use EPA-registered repellent at dawn and dusk, and for heavy biting a licensed mosquito-control service can treat breeding sites and resting spots you can't reach.