On this guide
Follow the path in order.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.
Best for launching on Instacart in Missouri. Need the full appendix? Open the full reference guide.
On this journey
1 of 7 reviewed
Current chapter: Choose setup
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.
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.
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
Part 2 of 3
Compare sole proprietor and LLC
The side-by-side setup comparison.
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.
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.
Best for
single-member LLC
Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business.
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
Part 3 of 3
See the money and risk realities before you spend
The upfront friction and risk notes that shape the launch decision.
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
02
Chapter 2 of 7
Handle the Missouri registration path in order
This is the state-side work before you rely on the platform to carry any part of the operating flow.
What this chapter does
The Missouri and federal registration sequence, tax setup, and state-maintenance checks.How to move through it
Step 2: Choose your name and public identity.Use the order check first, then move from name and entity work into EIN, banking, and tax setup.
4 parts to review • 21 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Registration sequence
Keep the Missouri and federal setup in this order.This chapter works best when you keep the filings, EIN, banking, and tax work in one clean sequence instead of bouncing between tabs.
- 1 Use the checklist to keep the order straight
These checklist groups keep the pre-spend, pre-sale, and pre-launch work visible before you open the platform workflow.
- 2 Handle name, entity, and filing setup
Use the name-and-formation steps plus the state LLC order before you open banking or state tax registration.
- 3 Get the EIN and banking basics in place
Use the EIN and banking steps before you start platform onboarding, payouts, or supplier paperwork.
- 4 Close the Missouri tax and filing branch
Keep the Missouri tax and maintenance rules together before you assume the platform solved them.
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 4
Use the checklist to keep the order straight
The quick-start checklist grouped by the main launch phases.
Part 1 of 4
Use the checklist to keep the order straight
The quick-start checklist grouped by the main launch phases.
Short answer
These checklist groups keep the pre-spend, pre-sale, and pre-launch work visible before you open the platform workflow.- Pick your business base: ordinary statewide lane or a sharper Kansas City / airport-property lane.
- Form the business or file the Missouri fictitious-name record if needed.
- Get an EIN from the IRS if applicable.
Do next: Pick your entity.
See checklist
Do these before you spend money
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Pick your entity.
- Pick your business base: ordinary statewide lane or a sharper Kansas City / airport-property lane.
- Stay in the lowest-friction first lane: ordinary grocery shopping and delivery, not airport-heavy work, alcohol, prescription, bulky-item, helper, employer, or other certification-heavy branches on day one.
- If your real base is in Kansas City, do not rely on statewide silence. Close the city business-license, zoning-clearance, and HB 2593 home-business branch directly first.
- Do not assume seller permits, resale certificates, or storefront rules belong in the ordinary shopper lane unless a fresh official source says they do.
Do these before your first paid batch
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Form the business or file the Missouri fictitious-name record if needed.
- Get an EIN from the IRS if applicable.
- Open a dedicated business bank account.
- Close the self-employment, tax-recordkeeping, and mileage-tracking baseline.
- Create your shopper account, complete verification, and choose your payout setup.
- Check physical-card or certification branches only if your actual first-market plan needs them.
Do these before launch goes live
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Confirm your transportation setup actually works in your market.
- Confirm your payout method and understand the difference between weekly direct deposit, instant cashout, and the Shopper Rewards Card path.
- Save the support, safety, and claim-routing paths before the first problem happens.
- Build a mileage, reimbursement, and tax-recordkeeping routine from day one.
- Treat airport-property work near MCI as a separate expansion branch rather than a default beginner lane.
Official links
Part 2 of 4
Handle name, entity, and filing setup
The name, formation, and LLC-order work for the state launch path.
Part 2 of 4
Handle name, entity, and filing setup
The name, formation, and LLC-order work for the state launch path.
Short answer
Use the name-and-formation steps plus the state LLC order before you open banking or state tax registration.- Step 3: Form the business.
- Missouri keeps the ordinary true-name sole-proprietor lane simple.
- If the LLC uses another public name, keep the fictitious-name branch separate from the legal formation branch.
Do next: Step 2: Choose your name and public identity.
Step details
Best practical order for a Missouri single-member LLC launch
- Decide whether you are truly staying in the ordinary solo shopper lane.
- Choose the legal name and file the LLC if you want one.
- Add the public-name branch only if the public operating name differs from the legal LLC name.
- Get the EIN.
- Open the bank account.
- Organize mileage, parking, payout, and tax tracking before the first batch.
- Check whether Missouri tax registration is actually needed for the real facts instead of assuming it.
- Check whether the actual business base creates a sharper Kansas City local branch.
- Build the shopper account and complete verification.
- Re-check airport-property assumptions before relying on MCI as a normal operating lane.
Sole proprietor: Decide whether you need a fictitious-name filing
Main takeaway
Missouri keeps the ordinary true-name sole-proprietor lane simple.
Watch for
- If you use a public-facing name, the current statewide fictitious-name branch stays separate.
- The reviewed Missouri SOS FAQ says that filing costs $7 and the registration lasts 5 years.
Single-member LLC: Keep the public-name branch separate
Main takeaway
If the LLC uses another public name, keep the fictitious-name branch separate from the legal formation branch.
Watch for
- Do not treat the shopper profile name as a substitute for legal-name or public-name setup.
Single-member LLC: Keep recurring entity and name maintenance visible
Main takeaway
Banking, records, and tax tracking should be set up immediately after formation rather than deferred until first payout.
Step 2: Choose your name and public identity
Main guide step 2
What this step settles
Decide whether you are operating under your legal name, using a Missouri fictitious name, or using an LLC name that differs from the public-facing brand. Your shopper profile does not replace legal registration details.
Step 3: Form the business
Main guide step 3
What this step settles
If you choose sole proprietor: Missouri does not require a statewide formation filing just to operate under your own true name.
- If you choose sole proprietor: Missouri does not require a statewide formation filing just to operate under your own true name.
- If you choose sole proprietor: If you use a public name, file the Missouri fictitious-name record before launch.
- If you choose single-member LLC: File LLC-1, Articles of Organization, with the Missouri Secretary of State.
- If you choose single-member LLC: Keep the reviewed fee split explicit: $50 online or $105 by paper.
- If you choose single-member LLC: File a fictitious name separately if the public-facing name differs from the legal LLC name.
Official links
Part 3 of 4
Get the EIN and banking basics in place
The EIN, banking, and recordkeeping baseline before launch.
Part 3 of 4
Get the EIN and banking basics in place
The EIN, banking, and recordkeeping baseline before launch.
Short answer
Use the EIN and banking steps before you start platform onboarding, payouts, or supplier paperwork.- Step 5: Open banking and bookkeeping.
Do next: Step 4: Get your EIN.
Step details
Step 4: Get your EIN
Main guide step 4
What this step settles
Use the direct IRS EIN application if applicable. For many LLCs this is required. For many sole proprietors it is optional but still useful for banking, tax paperwork, and keeping your Social Security number off more business documents.
Step 5: Open banking and bookkeeping
Main guide step 5
What this step settles
Do this right away:
- Open a dedicated checking account.
- Use one account and one card for business only.
- Save every weekly payout statement, instant cashout receipt, transfer record, mileage log, parking charge, toll, reimbursement, and support adjustment.
- Build a tax folder and a compliance folder from day one.
Official links
Part 4 of 4
Close the Missouri tax and filing branch
The Missouri tax stack, registration timing, and maintenance follow-up.
Part 4 of 4
Close the Missouri tax and filing branch
The Missouri tax stack, registration timing, and maintenance follow-up.
Short answer
Keep the Missouri tax and maintenance rules together before you assume the platform solved them.- A single-member LLC should expect to get one early.
- Missouri routes tax-account and employer-account setup through the state registration flow only when the actual facts create that need.
- No resale certificate, inventory registration, or seller-permit branch belongs in the ordinary solo shopper setup described here by default.
Do next: Step 6: Handle the Missouri tax and self-employment baseline.
Step details
1. EIN
Main takeaway
A single-member LLC should expect to get one early.
Watch for
- A sole proprietor may not always need one federally, but it is often the cleaner operating choice.
2. Missouri tax-registration boundary
Main takeaway
Missouri routes tax-account and employer-account setup through the state registration flow only when the actual facts create that need.
Watch for
- The ordinary Instacart shopper lane in this packet does not automatically open Missouri tax registration just because the founder is using a shopper platform.
3. No seller-permit or resale branch in this baseline
Main takeaway
No resale certificate, inventory registration, or seller-permit branch belongs in the ordinary solo shopper setup described here by default.
Watch for
- Do not treat store checkout tax, customer receipts, or platform language as proof that the shopper personally needs seller registration.
- If the founder later adds direct retail sales, inventory, or another business line, reopen the tax analysis instead of importing seller logic into this packet.
4. Estimated-tax and self-employment branch
Main takeaway
The clean baseline here is quarterly planning, mileage records, and good bookkeeping rather than wage withholding.
Watch for
- IRS gig-work guidance still matters because the income remains reportable even if no 1099 arrives the way the founder expected.
- Exact Instacart tax-document retrieval remains login-gated, so confirm the live path before tax season instead of waiting until filing week.
5. Kansas City local tax branch
Main takeaway
Kansas City keeps a profits-tax branch separate from the state lane.
Watch for
- That city branch should be reopened only when the actual operating base, address facts, or local tax facts point there.
- Do not treat a rideshare-shaped city page as either an Instacart exemption or a universal Instacart requirement.
6. Entity and public-name maintenance branch
Main takeaway
Keep the Missouri fictitious-name branch separate from the self-employment baseline.
Watch for
- If you form an LLC, keep legal formation, banking, tax tracking, and any public-name filing on the same launch calendar instead of treating them as unrelated chores.
7. If the founder changes entity type, geography, or operating model later
Main takeaway
Re-check the bank account, EIN, local rules, insurance profile, payout setup, and tax posture if you move from sole proprietor to LLC.
Watch for
- Re-check the whole branch if you move into Kansas City, start relying on airport-property deliveries near MCI, or move outside the ordinary contractor-style shopper lane.
Sole proprietor: Close the Missouri tax baseline for Instacart work
Main takeaway
The current Missouri startup and tax-registration sources do not identify a default seller-permit branch for the ordinary solo Instacart shopper lane.
Watch for
- Treat the founder baseline as federal self-employment tax, mileage and expense records, and estimated-tax planning where needed.
- Do not import marketplace-seller or retail inventory assumptions unless the facts later change into direct taxable sales of goods.
Sole proprietor: Understand the tax reality
Main takeaway
IRS self-employment tax still applies to the ordinary solo shopper fact pattern.
Watch for
- The real founder baseline is self-employment tax, recordkeeping, and any address-based Kansas City follow-up, not a statewide seller-permit workflow.
- If the business later hires, restructures, or moves into a heavier local or airport lane, reopen the full tax analysis instead of recycling the simple beginner baseline.
Single-member LLC: Keep recurring entity and name maintenance visible
Main takeaway
Banking, records, and tax tracking should be set up immediately after formation rather than deferred until first payout.
Single-member LLC: Keep the maintenance calendar attached to the launch plan
Main takeaway
Attach fictitious-name renewals, employer filings, and local follow-up to the same operating calendar from the beginning.
Watch for
- Re-check the whole branch if the business later changes entity type, operating address, or worker model.
Step 6: Handle the Missouri tax and self-employment baseline
Main guide step 6
What this step settles
Missouri's online business registration portal can register sales tax, vendor's use tax, consumer's use tax, withholding tax, unemployment tax, tire and lead-acid battery fees, and corporate income tax.
- Missouri's online business registration portal can register sales tax, vendor's use tax, consumer's use tax, withholding tax, unemployment tax, tire and lead-acid battery fees, and corporate income tax.
- The reviewed public record does not identify a default seller-permit or resale branch for the ordinary solo Instacart shopper lane.
- Treat the beginner baseline as federal self-employment tax, records, mileage tracking, and estimated-tax planning where needed instead of storefront registration.
- Use the Missouri registration portal only if your actual facts create a Missouri tax-account or employer-account need.
- Keep this packet anchored to the same-state platform-work baseline: ordinary Instacart shopper work is a self-employment and platform-operations lane, not a default retail-merchant lane.
Official links
03
Chapter 3 of 7
Finish the Instacart account and operations branch
Use these steps for the platform-side account, plan, operations, and eligibility work after the state basics line up.
What this chapter does
Instacart account setup, operations, and pre-launch readiness.How to move through it
Step 10: Choose the right Instacart payout and earnings setup.Open the Instacart branch only after the Missouri basics line up, then finish plan and operations choices.
3 parts to review • 49 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
Open the Instacart account
The first account and verification work for the platform path.
Part 1 of 3
Open the Instacart account
The first account and verification work for the platform path.
Short answer
Start the platform onboarding only after the legal name, EIN, and payout details line up cleanly.Do next: Step 9: Create your shopper account and clear screening.
Step details
Step 9: Create your shopper account and clear screening
Platform step 1
What this step settles
Have your government-issued ID, phone number, email address, Social Security number, bank account information, and transportation details ready.
- Have your government-issued ID, phone number, email address, Social Security number, bank account information, and transportation details ready.
- Public Shopper 101 guidance says some shoppers can start shopping in as soon as 1 hour in certain areas.
- Public February 4, 2025 Instacart integrity guidance says shoppers must be 18+, hold a valid driver's license and Social Security number, pass criminal and motor-vehicle-record background checks, and complete identity verification.
- The same public guidance says Instacart uses profile-photo verification, periodic identity checks, and account-security guardrails against duplicate or shared accounts.
- Public shopper terms preserve the ordinary contractor-style shopper path separately from any employment-agreement branch.
Official links
Part 2 of 3
Review the plan, pricing, and optional programs
Plan, pricing, and optional program decisions before launch.
Part 2 of 3
Review the plan, pricing, and optional programs
Plan, pricing, and optional program decisions before launch.
Short answer
Use this part for the platform plan, pricing, or optional brand and program choices that come before operations.- Step 11: Choose the right batch-access lane before you expand.
Do next: Step 10: Choose the right Instacart payout and earnings setup.
Step details
Step 10: Choose the right Instacart payout and earnings setup
Platform step 2
What this step settles
Practical rule:
Why it matters: Pick the simplest payout method that matches your cash-flow needs and re-check the exact fee, timing, and eligibility language in the live app before relying on any same-day transfer.
- There is no public monthly seller plan to buy before you can shop.
- Public shopper earnings pages say earnings are built from batch pay, promotions, and tips, that shoppers keep 100% of tips, and that heavy pay on qualifying batches is at least $2.
- Weekly direct deposit is the public baseline and pays for the prior Monday-Sunday week between Wednesday and Friday.
- The same public earnings page says instant cashout can move batch earnings in minutes after delivery and full earnings, including tips, 2 hours after delivery for a $0.50 fee.
- The Shopper Rewards Card page says the account is powered by Branch, banking services are provided through Lead Bank, there is no credit check, most U.S. shoppers are approved within minutes, and ID verification is required.
- Current public Shopper Rewards Card pages also say eligible shoppers can receive fee-free auto-payouts after every batch through that account path.
Step 11: Choose the right batch-access lane before you expand
Platform step 3
What this step settles
For a first launch:
- Public batch-access guidance says batches can include shop and deliver, shop-only, and deliver-only work.
- The same page says you are never penalized for not accepting a batch.
- New shoppers get the highest Cart Star priority for their first 10 batches.
- Batch visibility depends heavily on store proximity, account standing, and whether you are inside the store's highlighted area.
- Some stores require an active physical payment card at checkout.
- Alcohol, prescription, bulky-item, and certain heavy-item batches require certifications or opt-ins.
- start with ordinary grocery batches
- avoid alcohol and prescriptions until you understand the certification branch
- treat the physical payment card and specialty-batch options as later setup work rather than a day-one blocker
Official links
Part 3 of 3
Finish operations and eligibility before scaling
Operations and eligibility checks before the business scales.
Part 3 of 3
Finish operations and eligibility before scaling
Operations and eligibility checks before the business scales.
Short answer
Close the operating branch only after the listing, trip, hosting, or operational eligibility checks are ready.- Step 13: Confirm insurance and tax-document checkpoints before scaling.
Do next: Step 12: Complete the support, safety, and issue-routing setup.
Step details
Step 12: Complete the support, safety, and issue-routing setup
Platform step 4
What this step settles
Use the Instacart-specific version of this section:
- Confirm the live shopper signup and help pages.
- Complete identity verification and background checks.
- Save the payout path you actually choose.
- Learn where support lives before the first problem happens: the current public support record says active shoppers can reach live phone support through the Shopper app, and general questions continue through 24/7 in-app chat.
- Save the safety incident path too: the public help article says in-app reporting runs through Get help and Report safety issue, and it links separate auto and non-auto claim forms.
- Save payout records, support adjustments, reimbursements, and mileage logs as part of the normal launch routine, not as later cleanup.
- Keep Kansas City and MCI as separate follow-up branches instead of flattening them into the ordinary statewide shopper lane.
Step 13: Confirm insurance and tax-document checkpoints before scaling
Platform step 5
What this step settles
Public Instacart safety pages say shopper injury protection is available free of charge to U.S. full-service shoppers and that the safety hub includes resources on injury protection, safe driving, food safety, alcohol, and prescription delivery.
- Public Instacart safety pages say shopper injury protection is available free of charge to U.S. full-service shoppers and that the safety hub includes resources on injury protection, safe driving, food safety, alcohol, and prescription delivery.
- The public non-auto claim form also 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.
- Exact shopper tax-document retrieval remains login-gated through the shopper help flow, so confirm the live path for earnings summaries and tax forms before tax season instead of waiting until filing week.
Official links
04
Chapter 4 of 7
Handle the local and city-specific branches
These local facts can still change the answer even after the state and platform path looks clear.
What this chapter does
Local permits, local taxes, city appendices, and location-specific operating rules.How to move through it
Review kansas city appendix.Only turn this chapter on if your location, city, or operating model changes the answer.
2 parts to review • 1 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Only turn this branch on if it matches your plan
These branch questions keep the main reading path clean. If one matches your situation, the relevant detail blocks below get emphasized.
Matching branch content is now highlighted below.
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 2
Local permits and location checks
Missouri still pushes many address-based business questions down to local governments even when the ordinary solo shopper lane stays cleaner than a storefront or retail pack.
Part 1 of 2
Local permits and location checks
Missouri still pushes many address-based business questions down to local governments even when the ordinary solo shopper lane stays cleaner than a storefront or retail pack.
Short answer
Missouri still pushes many address-based business questions down to local governments even when the ordinary solo shopper lane stays cleaner than a storefront or retail pack.Do next: Review local permits and location checks.
Why this matters
Local permits and location checks
Main takeaway
Missouri still pushes many address-based business questions down to local governments even when the ordinary solo shopper lane stays cleaner than a storefront or retail pack.
Watch for
- For any place where the business will operate:.
- check local business-license questions tied to the actual operating base,.
- check city-tax questions tied to the actual operating base,.
- check zoning-clearance or address-use questions tied to the actual operating base,.
- check home-business questions tied to the actual operating base,.
- route a real Kansas City operating address into the city appendix instead of treating it as the same thing as the statewide lane,.
- keep those city questions separate from the ordinary statewide shopper lane,.
- keep airport-property access separate from city licensing,.
- reopen the MCI branch before relying on airport-property staging, repeated airport-area work, or rideshare-style access assumptions,.
- and reopen the analysis if the work starts looking more like repeated airport-property operations, warehousing, or visible commercial use at the address.
Official links
Part 2 of 2
Kansas City Appendix
Kansas City matters for city-license and city-tax follow-up if the real business base is inside the city.
Part 2 of 2
Kansas City Appendix
Kansas City matters for city-license and city-tax follow-up if the real business base is inside the city.
Short answer
Kansas City matters for city-license and city-tax follow-up if the real business base is inside the city.Do next: Review kansas city appendix.
City detail
Kansas City Appendix
Main takeaway
Kansas City matters for city-license and city-tax follow-up if the real business base is inside the city.
Watch for
- The city business-license FAQ is the right first local screen instead of assuming statewide silence means no city branch exists.
- The city zoning-clearance page is a second local screen when the business address is actually in the city.
- The city ride-sharing-driver tax page is a narrow signal that the city keeps a profits-tax branch separate from the state lane, not proof that Instacart is automatically exempt or automatically taxed the same way rideshare work is.
- The city tax forms hub is the right forms checkpoint only if the facts truly create a Kansas City tax branch.
- The city planning document on HB 2593 is a planning-side caveat only until the city confirms the actual address and use.
- Practical reading for this packet: a real Kansas City operating base should be routed into direct local closeout instead of being treated as the same thing as the simple statewide baseline.
Official links
05
Chapter 5 of 7
Use the hiring and insurance branch only if it matches your plan
This branch matters when you expect to hire, scale, or need the insurance follow-up tied to the business model.
What this chapter does
Hiring, payroll, insurance, and scale-up risk reminders.How to move through it
Review insurance reality.Only turn this branch on when hiring, payroll, or coverage questions are close enough to matter.
2 parts to review • 11 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Only turn this branch on if it matches your plan
These branch questions keep the main reading path clean. If one matches your situation, the relevant detail blocks below get emphasized.
Matching branch content is now highlighted below.
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 2
If you hire, close the employment branch first
The employee registration, payroll, and employment-program branch.
Part 1 of 2
If you hire, close the employment branch first
The employee registration, payroll, and employment-program branch.
Short answer
Use these cards if the business will hire employees or carry payroll responsibilities soon.- Missouri uses UInteract for unemployment-tax employer registration.
- Missouri Labor guidance says liable employers must provide wage information on covered employees each quarter and maintain unemployment-tax rate accounts.
- Missouri requires workers' compensation insurance at 5 or more employees, or at 1 in construction.
Do next: Review 1. employer registration.
Why this matters
1. Employer registration
Main takeaway
Missouri uses UInteract for unemployment-tax employer registration.
Watch for
- Keep the unemployment-employer account separate from the ordinary solo-shopper launch.
2. Wage reports and unemployment filings
Main takeaway
Missouri Labor guidance says liable employers must provide wage information on covered employees each quarter and maintain unemployment-tax rate accounts.
Watch for
- Keep the payroll-reporting branch visible instead of assuming registration alone closes the employer side.
3. Workers' compensation and related coverage
Main takeaway
Missouri requires workers' compensation insurance at 5 or more employees, or at 1 in construction.
Watch for
- Missouri's public guidance says LLC members and corporate officers count toward the employee total, while sole proprietors and partners do not count themselves.
- Missouri workers' compensation usually turns live at 5 employees, or at 1 in construction.
4. New-hire reporting
Main takeaway
Missouri employer guidance says newly hired employees must be reported within 20 calendar days.
Watch for
- Keep that branch separate from unemployment registration and separate from the Instacart platform lane.
5. Keep employer coverage separate from Instacart safety language
Main takeaway
Instacart's public safety, insurance-help, and tax-document posture does not replace payroll, workers' compensation, or Missouri employer obligations once staff are hired.
Watch for
- Keep contractor insurance responsibility, auto-claim routing, and injury-protection sources visible even when the business still has no employees.
Official links
Part 2 of 2
Keep the insurance branch visible as you scale
The insurance, liability, and scale-trigger branch.
Part 2 of 2
Keep the insurance branch visible as you scale
The insurance, liability, and scale-trigger branch.
Short answer
This is the insurance and liability follow-up tied to hiring, products, services, or growth.- Instacart's public shopper-safety pages say shopper injury protection and incident reporting exist for U.S. full-service shoppers.
Do next: Review insurance reality.
Why this matters
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.
06
Chapter 6 of 7
Keep the operating calendar and mistake list close after launch
Once you are live, use the ongoing calendar and the mistake list to keep the business on a safer path.
What this chapter does
The recurring compliance calendar, live-operating routine, and beginner mistakes to avoid.How to move through it
Assuming a seller permit, resale certificate, or storefront license is the first filing for an ordinary shopper.Use the recurring calendar first, then keep the repeated-mistake notes close after launch.
2 parts to review • 19 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 2
Use the ongoing compliance calendar
The recurring compliance calendar grouped by timing.
Part 1 of 2
Use the ongoing compliance calendar
The recurring compliance calendar grouped by timing.
Short answer
This groups the recurring checks by when they matter after launch.- Get EIN if applicable.
- Confirm whether your preferred stores require an active physical payment card.
- Re-check the live Instacart payout, support, insurance, and tax-document wording.
Do next: Finish entity or fictitious-name setup.
See checklist
Before first batch
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Finish entity or fictitious-name setup.
- Get EIN if applicable.
- Open bank account.
- Build the tax and mileage tracker.
- Check the sharper city or airport-property branch if your facts point there.
- Complete Instacart verification and choose a payout method.
Before first live launch
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Confirm whether your preferred stores require an active physical payment card.
- Re-check the live Instacart payout, support, insurance, and tax-document wording.
- Keep Kansas City and MCI as separate branches if those facts are real instead of flattening them into the statewide lane.
Monthly
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Save weekly payout records.
- Reconcile fees, reimbursements, and support adjustments.
- Review tax reserves.
- Keep local or airport-property branches visible if the work is drifting in that direction.
Quarterly
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Make estimated tax payments if required.
- Review whether the business is still in the simple solo-shopper lane or has drifted into employer, helper, or specialty-batch work.
Annual or periodic
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Renew the Missouri fictitious-name registration before the 5-year term lapses if you filed one.
- Re-check live Instacart payout, support, insurance, and tax-document pages before relying on older screenshots or older help articles.
- Re-check direct Kansas City local closeout and any MCI airport-property assumptions before heavier expansion.
Official links
Part 2 of 2
Common Mistakes New Shoppers Make
The most common mistakes from the research pack plus the first-launch recommendation.
Part 2 of 2
Common Mistakes New Shoppers Make
The most common mistakes from the research pack plus the first-launch recommendation.
Short answer
These are the repeated errors called out in the research pack.- Treating a Kansas City home base like it is automatically the same as the simple statewide lane.
- Treating MCI curbside geometry as proof of Instacart shopper authorization.
- Mixing personal and business money from day one.
Do next: Assuming a seller permit, resale certificate, or storefront license is the first filing for an ordinary shopper.
Why this matters
Practical first-launch recommendation
- If you are testing casually and staying in the ordinary solo shopper lane, sole proprietor can work.
- If you intend to build a durable long-term delivery business, separate the work financially, or add later complexity, single-member LLC is usually the better long-term path.
- For beginners, the easiest trustworthy launch lane is still ordinary grocery shopping and delivery with one person, one account, and no airport-heavy or specialized-batch branch.
Key detail
Assuming a seller permit, resale certificate, or storefront license is the first filing for an ordinary shopper
Keep in mind
- Treating a Kansas City home base like it is automatically the same as the simple statewide lane
- Treating MCI curbside geometry as proof of Instacart shopper authorization
- Mixing personal and business money from day one
- Relying on instant cashout or the Shopper Rewards Card before confirming live eligibility, fees, and timing
- Forgetting that some stores need an active physical payment card
- Waiting until tax season to find the live earnings-summary and tax-document path
- Treating public Instacart safety pages as a substitute for confirming insurance reality
- Treating the ordinary contractor-style shopper lane and the separate employment-agreement lane as the same thing
- Flattening local city or airport-property follow-up into a generic statewide answer
Official links
07
Chapter 7 of 7
Review your selected steps and open the packet PDF
Use the review screen to decide what belongs in the packet, then open a real PDF preview in a new tab.
Review and print
Review the chapters you kept and make sure the right reminders stay visible.
Use this step to keep only the chapters that match the launch plan now, then keep the local and city reminders close before you treat the packet as final.
Saved setup choice
single-member LLCThat choice stays visible while the rest of the journey gets lighter.
Packet count
4 chapters selectedOptional branches can stay out of the packet until they match the real launch plan.
Still verify locally
1 remindersLocal tax, zoning, insurance, and platform policy changes still need the official check.
Open the working launch packet with fillable tracker rows, then print or download it from the PDF tab.
Choose what stays in the packet
Selected chapters
- Choose setup
Your setup choice, the short safe path, and the money realities that matter before spending deeply. - Missouri registrations
The Missouri and federal registration sequence, tax setup, and state-maintenance checks. - Instacart setup
Instacart account setup, operations, and pre-launch readiness. - Local and city checks
Local permits, local taxes, city appendices, and location-specific operating rules. - Hiring and insurance
Hiring, payroll, insurance, and scale-up risk reminders. - Ongoing calendar and mistakes
The recurring compliance calendar, live-operating routine, and beginner mistakes to avoid.
See local verification reminders
- Official Missouri startup checklist for entity, tax, labor, and local-permit routing.
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.