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

Mississippi Commercial Landlord Required Disclosures

Learn why Mississippi commercial landlords have minimal statutory disclosure requirements and how to use the lease agreement to establish expectations.

Melvin Prince
3분 소요
확인됨 Apr 2026United States flag
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Lead Paint
Applies to pre-1978
Zoning Disclosures
Tenant’s responsibility

Unlike some states that impose heavy "truth in leasing" requirements or mandate extensive disclosure statements for retail tenants, Mississippi is a strictly pro-contract state. When negotiating a commercial lease in Mississippi, the legal doctrine of caveat emptor (buyer/renter beware) heavily applies.

No State-Mandated Commercial Disclosures

Mississippi state law imposes virtually no statutory disclosure requirements specifically for commercial landlords prior to signing a lease.

There is no requirement to proactively disclose:

  • Prior environmental hazard reports (unless fraud or active concealment is involved).
  • Details regarding outgoings, property taxes, or management fees outside of what is written in the lease.
  • Known defects in the property, as commercial leases are typically negotiated "as is, where is."
  • The specific bank or trust account where a security deposit will be held.

The Principle of "As Is"

Because commercial tenants are considered sophisticated business entities, Mississippi courts expect them to perform their own due diligence before signing a lease.

If a commercial tenant signs a lease without thoroughly inspecting the HVAC system, checking local zoning laws for their intended use, or formally requesting environmental disclosures, the burden of those oversights generally falls entirely on the tenant.

General Fraud and Misrepresentation

The lack of statutory disclosures does not mean landlords can lie. Commercial landlords are still bound by general common law duties against fraud and misrepresentation.

If a landlord actively conceals a material defect (e.g., painting over severe structural water damage just before a showing) or verbally promises that the HVAC is brand new when it is 20 years old, they can be held liable for fraud, leading to lease termination and damages.

Best Practice Disclosures via the Lease

While the state doesn't mandate disclosures, a well-crafted commercial lease serves as a cover disclosure document that protects the landlord from future disputes.

Effective Mississippi commercial leases typically include explicit disclosures and acknowledgements:

  1. "As-Is" Acceptance: A clause stating the tenant has inspected the premises and accepts them "as is, where is," releasing the landlord from any duty to make improvements unless specifically negotiated.
  2. Outgoings Transparency: A breakdown of all Triple Net (NNN) or Common Area Maintenance (CAM) charges the tenant will be expected to pay, detailing what is included and how it is calculated.
  3. Zoning and Permitted Use: A clause explicitly disclosing that the landlord makes no warranty that the premises are zoned for the tenant's specific business use, placing the burden of obtaining municipal permits entirely on the tenant.
  4. Subordination: Disclosure that the lease is subordinate to any current or future mortgages on the property.

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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