Lafayette County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: The Complete Guide for Oxford and Ole Miss Rental Property Owners
Lafayette County, Mississippi is a study in contrasts. It is a small county in northern Mississippi with fewer than 56,000 residents — and yet it contains one of the South’s most vibrant small cities, a nationally known university, a restaurant scene that draws visitors from Memphis and beyond, and a rental market that operates at price points more commonly associated with college towns twice its size. Oxford is the home of the University of Mississippi, the state’s flagship research institution, and the gravitational center of everything that makes Lafayette County distinctive. For landlords, this means operating in a market with unusually strong demand dynamics and some management challenges — student turnover, short-term rental competition, and a housing supply that has persistently lagged enrollment and population growth — all governed by Mississippi’s landlord-favorable state legal framework.
Oxford’s Rental Market: Supply, Demand, and Pricing
More than half of Oxford’s occupied housing units are renter-occupied — an unusually high share driven by the university’s enrollment. The median age in Oxford is 30 years old, and nearly a quarter of the population falls in the 18-to-24 student age band. This demographic reality shapes almost every aspect of the rental market. Near-campus properties — within walking or cycling distance of the Oxford Square and the university’s main campus — command the highest rents and experience the most competitive leasing seasons. Properties farther out, particularly in unincorporated Lafayette County beyond the Oxford city limits, serve a less pressured but more stable long-term rental market of university staff, healthcare workers, and professional families.
Rents for single-family homes in Oxford proper run $1,000 to $1,600 per month for standard units, with premium properties near the university or the Square reaching significantly higher. The average home value in Oxford has risen sharply, hitting roughly $400,000 in 2025 — up over 10% year over year — which reflects both strong demand and constrained supply. Oxford has more than 1,300 active Airbnb listings and around 680 VRBO listings, an outsized short-term rental presence that has pulled inventory out of the long-term rental market and contributed to affordability pressure. Lafayette County has the highest housing cost burden relative to local incomes of any Mississippi county, a dynamic that has prompted growing tenant advocacy and community discussions around affordable housing reform — though as of March 2026, no rent control or just-cause eviction ordinance has been enacted at either the county or city level.
A New Court for a Growing County: Lafayette County Court (2023)
One of the most practically important developments for Lafayette County landlords in recent years is the establishment of the Lafayette County Court, which became operational on January 1, 2023. Mississippi law mandates the creation of a County Court when a county’s population surpasses 50,000 — a threshold Lafayette County crossed with its 2020 Census count of 55,813. Judge Tiffany Kilpatrick was elected in November 2022 and presides over the court. County Court holds exclusive jurisdiction over unlawful entry and detainer (eviction) proceedings, superseding Justice Court as the proper filing venue for landlord-tenant actions in Lafayette County.
To file an eviction in Lafayette County, landlords submit their Complaint for Unlawful Entry and Detainer at the main floor of the Lafayette County Courthouse, 1 Courthouse Square, Oxford, MS 38655. County Court administration — including Judge Kilpatrick’s chambers — is on the third floor, Suite 301, phone (662) 234-4954 ext. 2. Filing fees are set at the same schedule as the Circuit Court. Landlords who have previously filed evictions in Justice Court should confirm with the clerk that County Court is now the appropriate venue, as the transition happened relatively recently and procedures are still maturing.
The Eviction Process in Lafayette County
The eviction process in Lafayette County follows Mississippi’s statewide framework, administered through the County Court. Every eviction begins with proper written notice. For nonpayment of rent, serve a 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate as required by Miss. Code Ann. § 89-7-27. The notice must be delivered properly — by certified mail, personal delivery to the tenant, or delivery to a person over 13 years old residing at the unit. If the tenant pays all rent owed within the three-day period, the eviction stops and the lease remains in force. If the tenant does not pay, the landlord may file a sworn Complaint for Unlawful Entry and Detainer with the County Court clerk after the notice period expires.
For lease violations other than nonpayment, a 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate is required under § 89-8-13, giving the tenant an opportunity to correct the violation before the eviction proceeds. If the tenant cures the violation within 14 days, the eviction does not proceed. Repeat violations can support a claim for unconditional termination — document all notices and communications carefully. For month-to-month tenancies, either party may terminate with 30 days written notice, with no reason required.
Once the complaint is filed, the County Court clerk issues a summons and schedules a hearing. The Lafayette County Sheriff serves the summons on the tenant. The hearing is typically set 3 to 5 days from summons issuance, and the entire eviction proceeding is capped at 45 days from filing under Mississippi statute. If the court rules in the landlord’s favor, a Writ of Possession is issued. The Sheriff enforces removal if the tenant does not vacate voluntarily. A tenant who pays all rent, fees, and court costs before the writ physically issues may stay the proceedings under § 89-7-45 — Oxford’s active student legal services and tenant advocacy community means tenants are more likely than average to be aware of and assert this right, so landlords should be prepared for contested hearings.
Student Leases and Ole Miss: Practical Management Guidance
Managing student rentals near the University of Mississippi requires a different playbook than managing standard long-term rentals. The university’s enrollment has grown dramatically, from around 15,000 students a decade ago to more than 20,000 today, generating persistent demand but also consistent tenant turnover, end-of-lease property wear, and summer vacancy risk. The most common structural mistake Oxford landlords make is using academic-year leases that expire in May — leaving the property vacant through the summer and creating annual re-leasing pressure. Twelve-month leases, even for student tenants, eliminate this exposure and provide rent revenue continuity.
Requiring a creditworthy parental co-signer or guarantor on every student lease is standard practice in Oxford and strongly advisable. Verify the guarantor’s annual income at 3 to 4 times the annual rent (not just monthly rent), since guarantors are absorbing full-year exposure. The Derrick Beard Act (Miss. Code Ann. § 89-8-29) allows a lease co-signer to terminate the lease upon the primary lessee’s death — a provision worth understanding when structuring guarantor obligations. Collect as large a security deposit as the market will bear, since Mississippi imposes no cap. In Oxford’s premium market, one and a half to two months’ rent is common and defensible.
Oxford’s short-term rental market — fueled by Ole Miss football, the nationally known restaurant scene on the Square, and the annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference — creates temptation for landlords to convert long-term rentals to Airbnb listings. This is a legitimate business decision, but it comes with the 2% Oxford tourism and economic development tax on gross rental proceeds, and it removes the property from the long-term stock. Landlords who remain in the long-term market benefit from the tighter supply that short-term conversion creates.
This guide is provided 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 Lafayette County Court at (662) 234-4954 ext. 2 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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