Created by potrace 1.10, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2011

Mississippi Commercial Lease Requirements and Essential Clauses

A landlord's guide to drafting commercial lease agreements in Mississippi, covering Triple Net (NNN) structures, essential clauses, and enforceability.

Melvin Prince
4分で読めます
認証済み Apr 2026United States flag
ミシシッピ州の商業賃貸契約事業用賃貸契約の規則ミシシッピ州の商業物件賃貸法ミシシッピ州の商業賃貸契約の要件ミシシッピ州での商業賃貸契約の作成

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Written Agreement
Required for >1 year
Notarization
Not required for validity

In Mississippi, the drafting of a commercial lease is an exercise in absolute contractual freedom. Because the state's statutes offer almost no "default protections" for either party in a commercial setting, every single detail regarding the tenancy, maintenance, liabilities, and remedies must be explicitly codified within the lease document itself.

The Written Requirement

Under Mississippi's Statute of Frauds (Miss. Code § 15-3-1), any contract for the lease of land for a term longer than one year must be in writing and signed by the party to be charged. A verbal agreement for a multi-year commercial lease is legally void.

Structuring the Lease: Gross vs. Net

The first major decision in any commercial lease is defining the economic structure. The lease must clearly classify the payment of outgoings (property taxes, insurance, building maintenance).

Full Service Gross (FSG): The tenant pays a single, higher flat rent. The landlord is responsible for paying all operating expenses out of that rent roll. Common in multi-tenant office buildings.

Triple Net (NNN): The tenant pays a lower base rent but assumes absolute responsibility for paying their pro-rata share of the building's three main operating expenses: Property Taxes, Building Insurance, and Common Area Maintenance (CAM). This is the dominant structure in Mississippi for retail, industrial, and single-tenant buildings.

Essential Clauses for Maximum Protection

To protect the landlord's asset and secure predictable cash flow, a Mississippi commercial lease must aggressively address the following areas:

1. Precise Premises and Permitted Use

  • Premises: Clearly define the exact square footage using BOMA standards, and clarify rights to common areas, parking, and signage.
  • Permitted Use: Narrowly define exactly what the tenant is allowed to do. Instead of "Retail Sales," specify "Sale of high-end women's apparel." This prevents a quiet boutique from pivoting into a loud discount store without landlord consent.

2. Rent and Escalations

  • Base Rent: The exact amount and payment date.
  • Escalations: The exact mechanism and formula for rent increases (Fixed percentage, CPI, or Market Review). See our Commercial Rent Increases guide.
  • Late Fees and Default Interest: Define steep daily interest rates and cover flat late fees for late payments to incentivize promptness, as Mississippi enforces reasonable contractual late fees.

3. Outgoings and CAM Reconciliations (For NNN Leases)

  • Clear Definitions: Meticulously list every expense the landlord can charge as part of Common Area Maintenance (e.g., parking lot sweeping, security, landscaping, management fees).
  • Audit Rights: Establish deadlines for the landlord to provide annual reconciliations of estimated vs. actual expenses and limit the tenant's timeframe to audit those charges (e.g., within 90 days).

4. Assignment and Subletting

  • The Landlord's Consent: State plainly that the tenant cannot assign the lease or sublet the premises without the landlord's prior written consent.
  • "Reasonable" Standard: Unless the lease specifies that the landlord can withhold consent in their sole and absolute discretion, Mississippi courts may imply a duty that consent cannot be "unreasonably withheld." Always draft for sole discretion.

5. Default and Remedies

  • Define exactly what constitutes an "Event of Default" (e.g., 5 days late on rent, failure to maintain insurance, vacating the premises).
  • Acceleration Clause: Include a clause allowing the landlord to accelerate all future unearned rent for the remainder of the lease term immediately upon the tenant's default.

6. Subordination, Non-Disturbance, and Attornment (SNDA) and Estoppels

  • Require the tenant to sign an SNDA and an Estoppel Certificate within a short timeframe (e.g., 10 days) upon request. This is critical if the landlord ever intends to refinance the building or sell it, as lenders require these documents to verify the lease is in good standing.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, important compliance dates, and documentation - making it easy to stay compliant with Mississippi regulations.

Back to [Mississippi Commercial Property Laws Overview] (/property-compliance/usa/mississippi/commercial-overview).

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