Skip to content
Tenant rights in Mississippi

Mississippi Tenant Rights

Habitability · quiet enjoyment · retaliation · entry notice · security deposits · anti-discrimination, under Miss. Code § 89-8 (Landlord and Tenant)

Every landlord operating rental property in Mississippi is legally required to uphold the tenant rights established by state statute and local ordinance, regardless of what the lease says. Tenant rights that are guaranteed by law cannot be waived by the tenant in a lease agreement. Landlords who are unaware of these obligations face dismissed eviction cases, habitability claims, fair housing investigations, and statutory penalties that can significantly exceed the underlying rent dispute.

Core Tenant Rights at a Glance1

Just cause required for eviction No
Rent increase cap (statewide) None statewide
Retaliation prohibition Prohibited statewide
Implied warranty of habitability Required statewide Miss. Code § 89-8-23
Entry notice required (non-emergency) Reasonable advance notice Miss. Code § 89-8 (Landlord and Tenant)
Source-of-income (Section 8) protection No (state level) Miss. Code § 89-8 (Landlord and Tenant)
Tenant rights cannot be waived by lease clause. In Mississippi, any lease provision that attempts to waive a tenant right established by statute is void and unenforceable, and attempting to enforce it can be used against the landlord in court. Know the floor the law sets before drafting your lease.

Compliance Checklist for Mississippi Landlords

  1. Habitability audit, inspect every unit at move-in and after any reported repair request. Log completion dates. Any defect that's left unresolved for 30+ days is a habitability claim waiting to happen.
  2. Written entry notices, document every entry with a written advance notice. Keep a log of date, time, purpose, and notice method.
  3. Security deposit documentation, conduct written move-in and move-out inspections with photos. Return the deposit (or itemized accounting) within the statutory deadline after move-out.
  4. Fair housing compliance, apply consistent, written screening criteria to all applicants uniformly. Train all leasing staff on protected classes under federal and Mississippi law.
  5. Non-retaliation documentation, before any adverse action (non-renewal, rent increase, termination), confirm it is not connected to a recent tenant complaint or protected activity. Document the business reason in writing before acting.

Other Guides for Mississippi

Tenant Rights in Other States

Informational only, not legal advice. Consult a licensed Mississippi attorney. Source attribution in the Sources band below.