Jackson County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: A Complete Guide for Rental Owners in Pascagoula, Ocean Springs, and the Industrial Coast
Jackson County is Mississippi’s industrial powerhouse on the Gulf Coast — a county defined by the massive presence of Ingalls Shipbuilding, by the petrochemical and refining operations along the Pascagoula River, by the artistically vibrant and rapidly growing community of Ocean Springs, and by a Gulf Coast geography that combines working waterfront, barrier island beauty, and hurricane exposure in equal measure. For landlords, Jackson County offers some of the most financially stable industrial-worker tenants in Mississippi, a premium coastal submarket in Ocean Springs that rivals anything on the Gulf Coast, and a legal framework that is straightforward and solidly landlord-favorable. This guide covers the market, the law, and the practical strategies that make a Jackson County rental portfolio work.
Ingalls Shipbuilding and the Jackson County Rental Market
No single employer shapes a Mississippi county’s rental market as comprehensively as Ingalls Shipbuilding shapes Jackson County’s. With approximately 12,000 direct employees and thousands more in the supply chain and support economy, Ingalls is the economic engine that powers Pascagoula and sustains the broader Jackson County housing market. Ingalls workers — welders, pipefitters, electricians, painters, riggers, and the full range of skilled shipbuilding crafts — earn wages that place them well above the Mississippi median. Journeyman-level craftworkers at Ingalls frequently earn $30 to $45 per hour, producing annual incomes of $60,000 to $90,000 or more including overtime — wages that comfortably support rents in the $1,200 to $1,600 range and make Ingalls employees among the most financially qualified tenants in Mississippi’s rental market.
Ingalls is a defense contractor whose workload is tied to U.S. Navy and Coast Guard shipbuilding contracts — a relatively stable source of employment that has sustained the Pascagoula yard through economic cycles that have devastated other manufacturing sectors. Contract wins can drive significant workforce expansion; contract completions can lead to layoffs among less senior workers. When screening Ingalls employees, verify craft classification, seniority, and length of service — a journeyman welder with 15 years of seniority is a profoundly different risk profile than an apprentice hired six months ago. Long-tenured Ingalls workers are among the best tenants in Mississippi.
Beyond Ingalls, the Pascagoula area hosts significant petrochemical employment at the Chevron Phillips Chemical complex and associated refining and processing operations along the Pascagoula River. These facilities provide high-wage, skilled employment with strong union representation and excellent benefits — another tier of financially qualified industrial tenants who represent low payment risk when properly screened. Healthcare employment at Singing River Health System and associated providers adds a professional-income layer to the county’s tenant base, particularly in the Ocean Springs and Gautier areas.
Ocean Springs: Jackson County’s Premium Rental Submarket
Ocean Springs is one of the most distinctive and desirable small cities on the Gulf Coast, and its rental market reflects that distinction with a premium pricing tier that stands apart from the rest of Jackson County. With a vibrant downtown arts district, award-winning restaurants, proximity to the Gulf Islands National Seashore, and a quality-of-life profile that attracts creative professionals, medical workers, and coastal lifestyle seekers from across the region, Ocean Springs has developed a strong rental market that consistently outperforms the county average on rents, tenant quality, and occupancy stability.
Well-maintained single-family homes in Ocean Springs can command rents of $1,400 to $1,750 per month or higher in the most desirable neighborhoods near downtown or with water views. The tenant demographic in Ocean Springs skews toward professionals, artists, healthcare workers, and transplants from larger coastal markets who have discovered the city’s quality of life. This is a market where presentation and condition matter — a property that is clean, updated, and well-maintained will attract multiple qualified applicants; a deferred-maintenance property will struggle even at discounted pricing.
Ocean Springs is also one of Mississippi’s more active short-term rental markets, with Airbnb and VRBO listings in the historic downtown and beachfront areas serving visitors who come for the arts scene, the festivals, and Gulf Coast recreation. Landlords considering STR operations in Ocean Springs should verify current permit requirements with the City of Ocean Springs — the city has actively regulated short-term rentals in recent years and requirements can evolve. The legal distinction between residential tenancy and short-term lodging applies in Ocean Springs exactly as elsewhere: a guest booking a weekend stay is a lodging customer, not a residential tenant under the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act.
Coastal Risk: Flood Zones and Hurricane Preparedness
Jackson County’s Gulf Coast position means flood zone status and hurricane risk are material considerations for a significant portion of the county’s rental housing inventory. Coastal and near-coastal properties in Pascagoula, Gautier, Ocean Springs, and the communities along the Sound are frequently in FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas where flood insurance is required for federally-backed mortgages and where storm surge risk from Gulf hurricanes is real and recurring. Hurricane Katrina caused severe damage across Jackson County in 2005, and the region experiences meaningful tropical weather impacts in most active hurricane seasons.
Landlords should disclose flood zone status in writing before lease execution, include hurricane preparedness provisions in the lease, ensure their insurance covers both wind and flood damage, and document the property’s condition thoroughly before each tenancy — particularly the condition of any exterior features, fencing, outbuildings, or waterfront structures that are at elevated risk of storm damage. Post-storm habitability determination language in the lease protects both parties by establishing a clear framework for addressing the situation when a storm causes property damage that affects habitability.
Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law and Eviction in Jackson County
All residential tenancies in Jackson County are governed by Mississippi’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, Miss. Code Ann. §§ 89-8-1 through 89-8-29. For nonpayment, the 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under § 89-7-27 begins the process. After the notice period expires without compliance, the landlord files at Jackson County Justice Court or County Court at 3104 Magnolia St. in Pascagoula. For straightforward possession-only cases, Justice Court is appropriate. For cases involving money damages — unpaid rent at Ingalls-level wages can accumulate quickly — County Court provides a better framework for recovery. The hard 45-day cap from filing to writ applies in both venues.
For lease violations, 14-Day Notice to Cure under § 89-8-13. For month-to-month terminations, 30-Day Notice to Vacate under § 89-8-19. Self-help eviction is prohibited. Mississippi imposes no cap on security deposits — at Jackson County’s rent levels, one to two months is standard. The 45-day return obligation with itemized accounting under § 89-8-21 applies without exception. For coastal properties with elevated end-of-tenancy complexity, thorough move-in documentation is especially valuable as protection against both deposit disputes and the difficulty of distinguishing tenant-caused damage from weather-related deterioration.
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 Jackson County Justice Court or County Court for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
|