2025 Edition Now Available
The Missouri Hunger Atlas 2025 visually engages readers to better understand hunger in Missouri. Through a series of indicator maps, tables and searchable data, the Atlas details the extent of food insecurity in all 114 Missouri counties and the City of St. Louis. The Atlas also assesses the performance of a host of public and private programs intended to help people struggling with hunger.
A web application for the Missouri Hunger Atlas also provides a way to search for specific data based on year, county, and indicator. Go to mohungeratlas.org to learn more. Key features and functions include:
- County Tables for each county in Missouri (including the city of St. Louis) that measure rates of both food insecurity and program performance.
- Indicator Maps that graphically illustrate patterns of food insecurity and program performance across the state.
- Data Browser that allows for data to be selected, displayed, and download for select measures and counties.
The complete Missouri Hunger Atlas 2025 will also be available as a PDF download in the near future. Previous editions of the PDF booklet can be accessed at the bottom of this page. Visit mohungeratlas.org to access searchable data going back to 2013.
Citation
McKelvey, B. & Moore, B. (2025). Missouri Hunger Atlas 2025. University of Missouri, Interdisciplinary Center for Food Security and Center for Health Policy.
Related
Missouri Food Security Task Force and Final Report (December, 2023)
Won’t You Feed My Neighbor? A Film About Food Insecurity in Missouri (Missouri Humanities, September, 2022)
Previous Editions
Missouri Hunger Atlas 2023 PDF
Missouri Hunger Atlas 2019 PDF
Missouri Hunger Atlas 2016 PDF
Missouri Hunger Atlas 2013 PDF
Missouri Hunger Atlas 2010 PDF
Kansas City Region, Missouri Hunger Atlas 2010 PDF
Saint Louis Region, Missouri Hunger Atlas 2010 PDF
Missouri Hunger Atlas 2008 PDF
Support
The Missouri Hunger Atlas is a project of the University of Missouri Interdisciplinary Center for Food Security and Center for Health Policy. Additional support is provided by the University of Missouri Division of Applied Social Sciences in the College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources and University of Missouri Extension’s Health and Human Sciences and Business and Communities units.