Instacart channel guide • Missouri launch path

Start Instacart in Missouri

Decide your setup, get the Missouri registration order straight, and finish the early Instacart launch steps without losing the official detail behind the answer.

Last verified April 30, 2026 7 chapters

Best for launching on Instacart in Missouri. Need the full appendix? Open the full reference guide.

On this guide

Follow the path in order.

On this journey

1 of 7 reviewed

Current chapter: Choose setup

01

Chapter 1 of 7

Choose the setup you want to launch with

Start with the setup decision first, then use the rest of the guide to build the state registrations and platform steps around it.

Core chapter

3 parts, 17 sources

What this chapter does

Your setup choice, the short safe path, and the money realities that matter before spending deeply.

How to move through it

Review sole proprietor.

Use Part 1 to get oriented, then compare both setup paths before you spend more time or money.

3 parts to review • 17 source touchpoints behind the drawers.

Chapter parts

Open Part 1 when you are ready to start working through this chapter.

After you start, only one part stays open at a time and the earlier ones stay easy to revisit.

Part 1 of 3

Start here before you spend heavily

A short orientation for the guided journey before the detailed launch steps begin.

Short answer

Use this first part only to get oriented. The detailed state, platform, local, and packet steps will follow in order.
  • First decide whether you are launching as a sole proprietor or a single-member LLC.
  • Then work through the Missouri registrations, Instacart setup, local checks, and packet review in order.

Do next: Do not spend money yet.

Why this matters

Key detail

Do not spend money yet.

Keep in mind

  • First decide whether you are launching as a sole proprietor or a single-member LLC.
  • Then work through the Missouri registrations, Instacart setup, local checks, and packet review in order.
Official links
Up next Compare setup

Part 2 of 3

Compare sole proprietor and LLC

The side-by-side setup comparison.

Short answer

Read both setup paths before you decide which one you want the rest of the launch flow to follow.
  • Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.
  • Missouri keeps the legal-name sole-proprietor lane simple.
  • Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business.

Do next: Review sole proprietor.

Save the path you want to optimize around

The unchosen setup stays visible for comparison, but the chosen one gets visual priority so the reading path feels more intentional.

Saved choice: single-member LLC

Quick tradeoff view

Use one pass to compare the launch speed, separation, and upkeep tradeoffs.

The detailed comparison stays below. This lens just makes the two setup shapes easier to scan before you read every bullet.

Best for

Sole proprietor

Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.

Speed to start Quicker start
Owner and business separation Very little separation
Ongoing admin load Lighter upkeep

Best for

single-member LLC

Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business.

Speed to start More front-loaded paperwork
Owner and business separation Cleaner separation
Ongoing admin load More upkeep
Compare details

Sole proprietor

Best for

Best for

Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.

What it means

  • Missouri keeps the legal-name sole-proprietor lane simple.
  • If you use a public name, Missouri routes that through the statewide fictitious-name filing.
  • The public Missouri fictitious-name filing fee is $7, and the registration is good for 5 years before renewal.
  • Do not import Missouri retail-license or resale assumptions into the ordinary Instacart shopper path unless the facts later change.
  • Business income generally runs through your personal return unless facts change the tax treatment.

single-member LLC

Best for

Best for

Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business.

What it means

  • Missouri uses LLC-1, Articles of Organization.
  • The reviewed public baseline is $50 online or $105 by paper, plus separate electronic-payment convenience fees where applicable.
  • The LLC shell does not answer Instacart onboarding, Kansas City, or airport-property questions by itself.
  • Federal tax treatment usually stays simple unless you elect something else, but that does not erase state, local, or platform follow-up.
Official links
Up next Money and risk

Part 3 of 3

See the money and risk realities before you spend

The upfront friction and risk notes that shape the launch decision.

Short answer

These are the friction points most likely to catch a new Instacart operator off guard in Missouri.
  • Missouri keeps the statewide beginner lane fairly clean, but it does not erase local branches.
  • Public shopper payout language now spans weekly direct deposit, instant cashout, and the Shopper Rewards Card, so re-check which options your actual account offers before you build cash flow around them.
  • Instacart's public shopper-safety pages say shopper injury protection and incident reporting exist for U.S. full-service shoppers.

Do next: Review missouri-specific friction.

Why this matters

Missouri-specific friction

Main takeaway

Missouri keeps the statewide beginner lane fairly clean, but it does not erase local branches.

Watch for

  • Kansas City is the sharpest local branch because the city keeps a broad business-license rule, a zoning-clearance step for city addresses, a narrower city-tax administration signal, and an unresolved HB 2593 home-business caveat alive at the same time.
  • MCI remains a separate airport-property follow-up branch. The airport-owned page closes curbside geometry, not a full Instacart shopper-access answer.
  • Safest beginner reading: treat Kansas City and MCI as expansion branches, not as day-one facts you can solve from one city FAQ or one airport map.

Instacart-specific friction

Main takeaway

Public shopper payout language now spans weekly direct deposit, instant cashout, and the Shopper Rewards Card, so re-check which options your actual account offers before you build cash flow around them.

Watch for

  • Batch access is not purely first-come, first-served. Store proximity, account standing, payment-card status, and certifications matter.
  • The public platform record preserves both the ordinary contractor-style shopper path and a separate employment-agreement branch.
  • Exact tax-document retrieval remains login-gated through the shopper help flow, so confirm the live path in the real account instead of guessing from old screenshots.
  • Specialty certifications, physical-card store access, alcohol, prescription, and bulky-item work should not be treated as universal day-one features.

Insurance reality

Main takeaway

Instacart's public shopper-safety pages say shopper injury protection and incident reporting exist for U.S. full-service shoppers.

Watch for

  • The public non-auto claim form says filing directly with Instacart is voluntary, Instacart does not guarantee claim outcome or turnaround time, and contractors remain responsible for applicable insurance, including automotive liability, workers' compensation, and other necessary insurance, licenses, and permits.
  • The public auto claim form asks whether the incident has been reported to the shopper's personal auto insurer, so do not treat Instacart's public claim pages as a substitute for confirming your own carrier's delivery-use position.
  • Do not treat one public help title, claim form, or older screenshot as a complete description of the current coverage trigger, limits, or exclusions.
Official links
Formation sos.mo.gov
Formation hub

What this page helps with

Main Missouri SOS formation hub.

Formation sos.mo.gov
LLC formation filing

What this page helps with

Current public Missouri LLC-1 form.

Official sos.mo.gov
Online filing fee savings

What this page helps with

Official FAQ says filing articles of organization online saves $55 versus paper, making the online filing fee $50 instead of $105.

Tax dor.mo.gov
State business registration

What this page helps with

Public Missouri portal can register sales tax, vendor's use tax, consumer's use tax, withholding tax, unemployment tax, tire and lead-acid battery fee, and corporate income tax. Use it only if the facts create one of those branches.

Federal irs.gov
EIN application

What this page helps with

Use the direct IRS path only.

Federal irs.gov
Federal gig-work tax hub

What this page helps with

Good federal anchor for self-employment records, deductions, and estimated-tax planning.

Platform instacart.com
Shopper safety and injury-protection posture

What this page helps with

Public page says shopper injury protection is available free of charge to all U.S. full-service shoppers and describes in-app incident reporting.

Platform instacart.com
Safety hub and resource branch

What this page helps with

Public page says the shopper safety hub includes resources on injury protection, safe driving, food safety, alcohol, and prescription delivery.

Platform shoppers.instacart.com
Contractor insurance responsibility

What this page helps with

Public claim form says filing directly with Instacart is voluntary, Instacart does not guarantee claim outcome or turnaround time, and contractors remain responsible for applicable insurance, including automotive liability, workers' compensation, other necessary insurance, and the licenses and permits usual or necessary for shopping and delivery work.

Platform shoppers.instacart.com
Auto claim process

What this page helps with

Public form asks whether the incident was reported to the shopper's personal auto insurer, which reinforces the need to keep the founder's own auto-insurance reality explicit.

Change your path

Need a different route into this answer?

Use one of these links if you landed in the wrong platform, wrong state, or want the state-only baseline before you keep reading.