Copiah County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: What Every Rental Property Owner in Hazlehurst and Crystal Springs Needs to Know
Copiah County stretches across the southwest-central Mississippi landscape along the I-55 corridor, a county defined by its agricultural roots, its small but commercially active county seat in Hazlehurst, and a geographic position that gives it closer economic ties to both Jackson and McComb than most rural Mississippi counties enjoy. For landlords operating rental properties here — whether in Hazlehurst, Crystal Springs, Wesson, or the scattered rural reaches of the county — the legal framework is Mississippi’s standard landlord-friendly regime: no rent control, no just-cause eviction requirement, and a fast, clear eviction process capped at 45 days from filing.
Copiah County’s Rental Market: Three Distinct Communities
Copiah County’s rental market is not monolithic — it splits meaningfully across three communities with different tenant profiles, employment bases, and rental dynamics, and landlords operating in each should tailor their screening and lease strategies accordingly.
Hazlehurst is the county seat and largest community, with roughly 3,500 residents and a rental market driven primarily by local government employment, healthcare, retail, and a modest manufacturing base. Hazlehurst sits directly on I-55, which gives workers access to Jackson — about 45 miles north — and to McComb — about 40 miles south — expanding the effective employment catchment area for Hazlehurst residents well beyond the local economy. Tenants employed in Jackson’s healthcare, government, or professional services sectors while living in Hazlehurst represent a desirable demographic: metropolitan-level incomes at rural Mississippi rent levels.
Crystal Springs, with approximately 5,000 residents, is Copiah County’s second-largest community and has its own distinct economic identity rooted in tomato farming — it was historically known as the “Tomato Capital of the World” — and food processing. The Watkins Company and other agricultural processors provide employment, but agricultural and food processing employment is inherently seasonal and subject to weather and market fluctuations. Landlords renting in Crystal Springs should screen carefully for year-round income stability rather than peak-season earnings, and should be attentive to the risk of tenant income disruption during agricultural off-seasons.
Wesson is a small community of roughly 1,200 residents but is home to Copiah-Lincoln Community College, a two-year institution that generates a localized rental market for student housing and faculty accommodations. Co-Lin’s enrollment of approximately 3,000 students creates demand for off-campus housing within commuting distance of the campus. Student tenants require specific lease strategies — co-signer requirements, lease terms aligned with the academic calendar, and explicit policies on guests and occupancy limits — that differ meaningfully from standard residential rental screening.
The Legal Framework Governing Copiah County Tenancies
All residential tenancies in Copiah County entered into on or after July 1, 1991 are governed by Mississippi’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, Miss. Code Ann. §§ 89-8-1 through 89-8-29. Copiah County has no County Court, no local rental ordinances, and no municipal regulations in any of its communities that modify or supplement the state law framework. The Act establishes the rights and obligations of both landlords and tenants and cannot be waived or overridden by lease agreement — any lease clause that purports to eliminate the landlord’s habitability obligation or waive the tenant’s right to proper eviction proceedings is unenforceable.
The landlord’s core obligations under § 89-8-23 include maintaining the rental unit in a fit and habitable condition, complying with applicable building and housing codes, keeping electrical, plumbing, heating, and cooling systems in working order, maintaining common areas in a clean and safe condition, and making repairs within a reasonable time after receiving written notice from the tenant. In Copiah County, where a meaningful share of the rental housing stock consists of older single-family homes and mobile homes that may have deferred maintenance issues, the habitability obligation is not merely aspirational — it is a legal floor below which landlords cannot fall without risking a habitability defense in an eviction proceeding or a civil claim for damages.
Tenants have parallel obligations under § 89-8-25: to pay rent when due, to maintain reasonable cleanliness, to avoid damage to the premises beyond normal wear and tear, to use all facilities and systems properly, and to comply with all reasonable lease terms. Mississippi law gives landlords a clean and efficient enforcement mechanism when tenants fail to meet these obligations — the eviction process under §§ 89-7-27 through 89-7-49 is among the most landlord-favorable in the country.
Eviction in Copiah County: Notice, Filing, and Possession
For nonpayment of rent, the eviction process begins the moment rent is past due and the landlord decides to proceed. The first step is serving a written 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under § 89-7-27. The notice must identify the rental property, state the precise amount of rent and any contractually authorized late fees owed, and demand payment or surrender of possession within three calendar days. Service may be made by personal delivery to the tenant, by posting the notice conspicuously on the main entrance of the premises, or — if the tenant has previously agreed in a signed writing — by electronic means such as email or text message under the 2018 amendment to Mississippi eviction law.
Documentation of service is not a formality — it is the foundation of a successful eviction filing. If the case is contested and the tenant denies receiving notice, the landlord’s contemporaneous record of service is the evidence that resolves the dispute. For posted notices, photograph the notice on the door with a timestamp. For personal delivery, note the date, time, and manner of delivery in writing immediately afterward. For electronic service, retain the transmission record.
After the three-day period expires without payment or surrender, the landlord files a sworn affidavit with the Copiah County Justice Court at 100 Caldwell Dr. in Hazlehurst. The affidavit must describe the rental premises, state the amount of rent and fees owed, and certify that proper notice was served and the notice period has elapsed. The Justice Court issues a summons and schedules a hearing within three to five business days. At the hearing, the landlord presents the lease, the notice, and the proof of service; the tenant may respond. If the landlord prevails, the court issues a judgment and a writ of possession executed by the Copiah County Sheriff. The tenant retains the statutory right to cure — paying all rent, fees, and court costs — at any point before the writ is physically executed under § 89-7-45.
For lease violations other than nonpayment, the landlord must serve a 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate under § 89-8-13, giving the tenant 14 days to remedy the breach before an eviction filing is permitted. For month-to-month tenancy terminations without cause, a 30-Day Written Notice to Vacate under § 89-8-19 is required. Mississippi does not require landlords to justify a decision to terminate a month-to-month tenancy — the 30-day notice is the only procedural requirement, and no reason need be stated.
Security Deposits, Move-Out, and Avoiding Disputes
Mississippi imposes no cap on security deposits, and Copiah County has no local ordinance restricting the amount a landlord may collect. One month’s rent is the standard market practice at Copiah County’s prevailing rent levels of $575 to $900; for higher-risk tenants — those with limited rental history, prior evictions, or income at the low end of the qualifying threshold — a deposit of one and a half to two months is permissible and prudent.
The deposit return obligation under § 89-8-21 is triggered by the simultaneous satisfaction of three conditions: the tenancy has ended, the tenant has surrendered possession of the premises, and the tenant has made a written demand for return of the deposit. The landlord then has 45 days from the date all three conditions are met to return the deposit — or the remaining balance after legitimate deductions — along with an itemized written accounting of any amounts withheld. Permissible deductions include unpaid rent and fees, actual damage to the property beyond normal wear and tear, cleaning costs if the unit was left substantially dirtier than at move-in, and any charges expressly authorized by the lease. Normal wear and tear is not deductible.
Wrongful withholding of the deposit exposes the landlord to $200 in statutory damages plus actual damages under § 89-8-21. While this penalty is modest compared to states that impose multiplied damages, the reputational and relationship costs of a deposit dispute in a small county community are a meaningful practical deterrent. The best protection against disputes is documentation: a signed move-in condition checklist, dated photographs of every room at move-in and move-out, and a written forwarding address collected from the tenant before vacating. With those three things in hand, a Copiah County landlord can defend virtually any deposit deduction decision with confidence.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant law is subject to change. Consult a licensed Mississippi attorney or contact the Copiah County Justice Court for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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