Benton County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: Complete Guide for Rental Owners in Ashland and North Mississippi
Benton County is one of Mississippi’s smallest and most rural counties, tucked into the hill country of the far north along the Tennessee border region. Named in 1870 after Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton, the county seat of Ashland is a community of fewer than 500 people — a courthouse, a post office, and the essential services of county government in a setting that is deeply and unapologetically rural. With approximately 8,000 total residents, Benton County has one of the thinnest rental markets in the state, but its position in north Mississippi near the Memphis metro corridor gives it a modest cross-commuter tenant dimension that distinguishes it from the most isolated rural counties. For landlords, Mississippi’s thoroughly landlord-favorable legal framework applies in full, and the Justice Court in Ashland handles the county’s low-volume eviction caseload with characteristic rural efficiency.
The Benton County Rental Market
The rental housing stock in Benton County consists primarily of single-family homes and manufactured housing at price points among the lowest in Mississippi — typically $500 to $800 per month for single-family homes, with mobile homes available at lower rates. The county’s economic base is timber production, agriculture, and county/local government employment, supplemented by a commuter workforce that drives to Marshall County, Alcorn County, or, for some residents, into the Memphis metro area. The Memphis metro, centered about 60 to 80 miles northwest of Ashland depending on destination, is within feasible commuting range for tenants willing to drive, and these commuters typically bring the strongest income profiles in the local rental market.
The practical reality of operating rental property in Benton County is that the qualified applicant pool for any given unit is small. Patient, disciplined screening is the most important risk management tool available to landlords here. A vacancy that lasts an extra few weeks while waiting for a qualified applicant is a manageable cost. A poorly screened tenancy that proceeds to eviction — with legal fees, lost rent, and potential property damage — can represent three to six months of gross rental income in losses. The economics strongly favor selectivity over speed in this market.
Mississippi Law in Benton County
All post-1991 residential tenancies in Benton County are governed by Mississippi’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, Miss. Code Ann. §§ 89-8-1 through 89-8-29. The Act imposes good-faith obligations on both parties, requires the landlord to maintain the dwelling unit in substantially the same condition as at lease inception (§ 89-8-23), and provides for tenant repair-and-deduct rights capped at one month’s rent after written notice and a 30-day cure period (§ 89-8-15). Mississippi provides no rent control, no just-cause eviction requirement, and no source of income protections anywhere in the state or in any Benton County community.
Security deposits have no statutory maximum in Mississippi. At Benton County’s rent levels, a deposit equal to one month’s rent — $500 to $800 — is standard market practice. The deposit must be returned with itemized written accounting within 45 days of the three-part trigger: termination of tenancy, delivery of possession, and written demand by the tenant (§ 89-8-21). Wrongful retention with absence of good faith subjects the landlord to $200 in statutory damages plus actual damages. Conduct a documented move-out inspection on the day of possession return and obtain the tenant’s forwarding address for the accounting delivery.
Eviction at Benton County Justice Court
Benton County Justice Court at 190 Ripley Ave. in Ashland — phone (662) 224-6320 — handles all residential eviction proceedings in the county. There is no County Court in Benton County, so Justice Court is the sole forum. For nonpayment of rent, begin with a written 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under Miss. Code Ann. § 89-7-27, stating the exact amount of rent and late fees owed. Serve personally on the tenant or post conspicuously on the premises. After three days without payment or surrender, file a sworn affidavit at Justice Court describing the premises, the amount owed, and confirming proper notice under § 89-7-29. The court issues a summons setting a hearing 3 to 5 days from the summons date under § 89-7-31. The entire proceeding is capped at 45 days from the date of filing under § 89-7-39. If the landlord prevails, the court issues a removal warrant enforced by the Benton County Sheriff.
In a county with only 8,000 residents and a very low eviction filing volume, the Justice Court’s docket typically moves quickly for uncontested nonpayment cases. The total process from 3-day notice to sheriff enforcement often resolves in two to three weeks when the tenant does not appear or contest. For contested cases or lease violation matters requiring a 14-Day Notice to Cure under § 89-8-13, the process runs somewhat longer but remains well within the 45-day statutory cap.
Written Leases and Documentation
Every Benton County tenancy should be documented with a written lease regardless of the rent level or the apparent simplicity of the arrangement. In a rural small-claims-style court proceeding, a signed written lease is the landlord’s most important piece of evidence — it establishes the rent amount, the due date, any late fees, the deposit terms, and the notice requirements that govern the entire eviction process. A verbal month-to-month arrangement is legally recognized in Mississippi but creates ambiguity at every stage of a dispute. The few minutes required to execute a written lease at the start of every tenancy pays dividends in every subsequent legal proceeding.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Mississippi attorney or contact Benton County Justice Court for guidance specific to your tenancy. Last updated: March 2026.
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