Mississippi Rent Increase Laws: Notice Periods and Caps Explained
Learn about Mississippi's lack of rent control, the prohibition on local rent caps, and the required 30-day notice for rent increases on month-to-month leases.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Mississippi is a jurisdiction that firmly prioritizes the free market over rent regulation. As a landlord in the Magnola State, you have broad authority to set rental rates and increase them as market conditions dictate, provided you adhere to basic notification requirements.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Mississippi for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
No Statewide Rent Control
There is no statewide rent control in Mississippi. The Mississippi Residential Landlord and Tenant Act does not mandate a cap on how much a landlord can increase rent. Landlords are free to raise the rent by any percentage they deem appropriate.
Local Rent Control Prohibited
In some states, municipalities can pass their own rent control ordinances even if the state does not have them. Mississippi explicitly prohibits this.
Under Mississippi Code § 89-8-19, no county, municipality, or other political subdivision can enact, maintain, or enforce any ordinance or resolution that regulates the amount of rent charged for leasing private residential property. This ensures that landlords operating anywhere in the state face a uniform, free-market regulatory environment.
Required Notice Periods
While landlords have the right to raise rent, they cannot do so arbitrarily or without providing the tenant sufficient warning. The required notice depends entirely on the type of tenancy:
Month-to-Month Tenancies
For a month-to-month lease, a landlord must provide at least 30 days' written notice before the effective date of the rent increase.
Example: If a landlord wants to increase the rent starting on June 1st, they must deliver the written notice of the increase to the tenant no later than May 2nd.
Week-to-Week Tenancies
For week-to-week leases, the landlord must provide at least 7 days' written notice prior to the rent increase taking effect.
Fixed-Term Leases
If a tenant is on a fixed-term lease (e.g., a one-year lease), the landlord cannot increase the rent during the term of that lease. The rent is locked in until the lease expires.
The only exception is if the lease agreement contains a specific "rent escalation clause" that permits increases during the term (such clauses are more common in commercial leases than residential).
To increase the rent at the end of a fixed-term lease, the landlord should provide the tenant with written notice of the new rental rate before offering a lease renewal, typically 30 to 60 days prior to expiration depending on the lease terms.
Prohibition on Retaliation
While Mississippi gives landlords broad discretion over rent increases, landlords cannot increase rent as a form of illegal retaliation.
If a tenant exercises a protected legal right—such as filing an official complaint with a government agency regarding a health or safety code violation, or exercising their right to "repair and deduct"—a landlord cannot respond by arbitrarily jacking up the rent. Raising rent discriminatorily based on race, color, religion, sex, familial status, or national origin is also a violation of the federal Fair Housing Act.
Best Practices for Approaching Rent Increases
- Be Transparent: Clearly state the rent increase policy in the original lease agreement, especially the notice requirement for renewal periods.
- Give Advance Notice: While 30 days is the legal minimum for month-to-month leases, providing 45 to 60 days’ notice gives the tenant more time to budget or decide to move, leading to less friction.
- Use Written Notices: Always deliver rent increase notices in writing, either via certified mail or a timestamped digital portal, to maintain a clear paper trail.
How Landager Helps
Managing rent increases seamlessly means never missing an expiration date. Landager helps you track lease end dates automatically, sending you notifications 60 and 90 days in advance. You can easily generate legally compliant, formatted rent increase notices and deliver them securely through the tenant portal, ensuring the required 30-day minimum is always met.
Sources & Official References
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