Attala County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: Complete Guide for Rental Owners in Kosciusko
Attala County occupies the geographic center of Mississippi, a position that gives Kosciusko — the county seat — a quiet centrality in the state’s interior landscape. The historic Natchez Trace Parkway passes through the county, linking it to one of America’s great scenic corridors that stretches from Natchez in the southwest to Nashville, Tennessee in the northeast. Kosciusko carries its own distinct cultural significance as the birthplace of Oprah Winfrey, whose origins in this small central Mississippi city have made it a point of curiosity for travelers and a source of local pride. For landlords, Attala County offers a stable if modest rental market governed entirely by Mississippi’s thoroughly landlord-favorable legal framework, with eviction proceedings handled efficiently at the county Justice Court.
The Kosciusko Rental Market
With approximately 18,500 county residents and around 7,500 in Kosciusko proper, Attala County supports a rental market that is small but reasonably stable relative to other rural central Mississippi counties. Single-family home rents in Kosciusko run $650 to $950 per month, with mobile homes and smaller units at lower price points. The county’s economic anchors are Baptist Medical Center Attala — the largest single employer — Kosciusko’s city and county government, local schools, and a mix of agricultural services and light manufacturing. This employment mix produces a tenant pool with more income stability than counties dominated by a single industry or seasonal employment, though individual job losses at the medical center or major employers can ripple through the rental market meaningfully given the county’s small size.
Mississippi Law in Attala County
All post-1991 residential tenancies in Attala County are governed by Mississippi’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, Miss. Code Ann. §§ 89-8-1 through 89-8-29. Mississippi provides no rent control, no just-cause eviction requirement, and no source of income protections at the state or local level. The Act requires landlords to maintain dwelling units in substantially the same condition as at lease inception (§ 89-8-23) and imposes parallel obligations on tenants to maintain cleanliness, avoid damage, and report known conditions that could harm the property (§ 89-8-25). Security deposits have no statutory cap — landlords may charge any amount agreed in the lease — but must be returned with itemized accounting within 45 days of termination, delivery of possession, and written tenant demand under § 89-8-21.
Eviction at Attala County Justice Court
Attala County Justice Court at 230 W. Washington St. in Kosciusko — phone (662) 289-2921 — handles all residential eviction proceedings. Two elected Justice Court Judges serve the county. Attala County does not have a County Court, so Justice Court is the sole eviction venue. Filing fees run approximately $50 to $100. For nonpayment, begin with a written 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate (§ 89-7-27), then file a sworn affidavit at Justice Court. The court sets a hearing 3 to 5 days from the summons date, and the entire proceedings are capped at 45 days from filing under § 89-7-39. If the tenant pays all rent, late fees, and court costs before the removal warrant physically issues, proceedings are stayed under § 89-7-45.
For remediable lease violations — unauthorized pets, occupants, or failure to maintain the premises — serve a written 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate under § 89-8-13. If the violation is not corrected within fourteen days, file at Justice Court. Document all notices with dated photographs and retain proof of service for the court hearing. Self-help eviction is absolutely prohibited under Mississippi law — never change locks, remove doors, or shut off utilities as a substitute for the court process.
Screening for the Attala County Market
In a county of 18,500 people, the qualified applicant pool for any given rental is small. Screening discipline is therefore more important in Attala County than in larger markets where a poorly screened tenant can be replaced relatively quickly. Apply a documented written screening policy uniformly to every applicant: income verification at a minimum of 3x monthly rent, rental history review through landlord references, criminal background check, and eviction history. For applicants employed at the medical center or local government, pay stub documentation is straightforward. For agricultural or self-employed applicants, request two years of tax returns to verify income consistency. A longer vacancy is almost always less costly than a problematic tenancy that proceeds to eviction in a market this size.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Mississippi attorney or contact Attala County Justice Court for guidance specific to your tenancy. Last updated: March 2026.
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