Yazoo County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: A Complete Guide for Rental Property Owners in Yazoo City and the Delta Edge
Yazoo County sits at the eastern edge of the Mississippi Delta, where the flat alluvial plain begins to give way to the loess bluffs and rolling terrain that define central Mississippi. Yazoo City — the county seat and by far the county’s largest community — occupies this transitional zone physically and economically, positioned between the Delta’s agricultural economy to the west and the Jackson metropolitan area’s broader employment base 45 miles to the south on US-49. That in-between position gives Yazoo City a character and economic profile that is genuinely distinct from either the pure Delta counties to its west or the more suburban counties ringing Jackson to the southeast: it is a mid-sized Mississippi city with its own manufacturing base, its own regional hospital, its own commercial identity, and a rental market that draws on all of these local anchors alongside the Jackson commuter flow that its location on US-49 makes possible.
Yazoo City also carries a specific note in Mississippi literary history: it is the hometown of Willie Morris, the writer and editor whose memoir North Toward Home — published in 1967 — became one of the most celebrated accounts of growing up in Mississippi and leaving the South for New York, and whose later writing documented both his roots in Yazoo City and his eventual return to Mississippi. Morris’s Yazoo: Integration in a Deep-Southern Town, published in 1971, documented Yazoo City’s school desegregation experience with the complexity and sympathy that characterized his best work. The town’s literary legacy, like most of small-town Mississippi’s cultural distinctions, coexists with the economic realities of a 31% poverty rate and a rental market shaped as much by what people can afford as by what the market could theoretically support.
The Yazoo City Economy: Manufacturing, Healthcare, and Jackson Access
Yazoo City’s manufacturing base includes pharmaceutical production — Actavis, the generic pharmaceutical manufacturer (now part of Allergan/AbbVie), has operated a significant manufacturing facility in Yazoo City for decades, producing generic medications for national distribution. Pharmaceutical manufacturing is a higher-skill, higher-wage industrial category than general food processing or assembly manufacturing; workers at pharmaceutical plants typically earn above-average manufacturing wages with benefits, and these employees represent one of the more financially attractive tenant profiles in the Yazoo City market. Verify income with three months of pay stubs and employer confirmation; these applicants will generally clear a 3x monthly rent threshold without difficulty.
King’s Daughters Medical Center anchors Yazoo City’s healthcare employment sector, providing nursing, technical, administrative, and support jobs whose monthly incomes are predictable, professionally stable, and easy to verify. Healthcare workers at King’s Daughters tend toward longer tenancies in communities where they have professional roots, and their income is not subject to the seasonal or overtime variability that affects manufacturing and agricultural workers. For landlords renting in the $600–$775 range that characterizes Yazoo City’s mid-tier market, a verified hospital employee is among the most reliable applicant profiles available.
The Jackson commuter connection adds a third significant tenant segment. US-49 runs south from Yazoo City directly to Jackson in approximately 45 minutes under normal conditions — a commute that some households are willing to make for the significantly lower housing costs that Yazoo City offers relative to the Jackson metro’s more expensive suburban markets. Workers employed in Jackson’s state government offices, healthcare systems, professional services, and manufacturing sectors who live in Yazoo City bring Jackson-benchmarked wages back to Yazoo County rent levels. These commuter tenants typically represent a higher income-to-rent ratio than locally employed workers and are worth targeting specifically in marketing if you have well-maintained properties with good US-49 access.
Bentonia and the Blues: A Cultural Note
Bentonia, a small community in northern Yazoo County, holds a specific place in blues history as the home of the Bentonia school of blues — a distinctive, minor-key guitar style associated with Skip James and Jack Owens that differs from the more widely known Delta blues style of the county’s western neighbors. The Blue Front Cafe in Bentonia, operated for decades by Jimmy “Duck” Holmes, is one of the oldest surviving juke joints in Mississippi and a site of blues heritage tourism that draws visitors to an otherwise quiet rural community. This cultural distinctiveness is a source of local pride and a small tourism draw, but it has no material effect on the residential rental market in this part of the county.
Mississippi Law and the Eviction Process in Yazoo County
Yazoo County has no local landlord-tenant ordinances, no rent control, and no just-cause eviction requirement. All landlord-tenant relationships are governed by Mississippi state law: the Mississippi Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Miss. Code Ann. §§ 89-8-1 through 89-8-29) and the unlawful entry and detainer statutes (§§ 89-7-1 through 89-7-59). Landlords must maintain habitable conditions — structurally sound, weathertight, functioning plumbing, heating, and electrical systems. Security deposits are not capped; they must be returned with itemized written accounting within 45 days of lease termination, delivery of possession, and written tenant demand, with a $200 penalty plus actual damages for wrongful retention under § 89-8-21.
Yazoo County has no County Court. All evictions are filed at Yazoo County Justice Court, 211 E. Broadway Street, Yazoo City, MS 39194, phone (662) 746-2661. Begin with the appropriate written notice: a 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate for nonpayment under § 89-7-27, or a 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate for lease violations under § 89-8-13. Serve by certified mail with return receipt or personal service with a witness, and retain all documentation. After the notice period expires, file a sworn Complaint for Unlawful Entry and Detainer. The Yazoo County Sheriff serves the summons, a hearing is scheduled within one to two weeks, and the judge rules. If the landlord prevails, a Writ of Possession is issued and enforced by the Sheriff. Uncontested evictions in Yazoo County typically resolve within two to eight weeks of filing.
This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant law is subject to change and may vary based on individual circumstances. Consult a licensed Mississippi attorney or contact Yazoo County Justice Court at (662) 746-2661 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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