Pontotoc County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: A Guide for Rental Property Owners in Pontotoc City and the Northeast Mississippi Manufacturing Corridor
Pontotoc County is one of the more economically resilient small counties in Mississippi, tucked into the northeast hill country and positioned within the gravitational pull of the Tupelo metropolitan area — one of the state’s strongest regional economies. With a population of about 32,100, a manufacturing-oriented employment base, and a poverty rate significantly below the state average, Pontotoc County offers landlords a rental market that is modest in size but comparatively stable. This guide covers the state legal framework that governs landlord-tenant relationships here, the county’s court system, the local economy and what it means for your tenant pool, and the practical considerations for operating rental property in this corner of northeast Mississippi.
The Northeast Mississippi Manufacturing Corridor and Pontotoc’s Place in It
To understand Pontotoc County’s rental market, you have to understand the economic context of northeast Mississippi as a whole. The Tupelo metropolitan area — centered on Lee County, which borders Pontotoc directly to the northeast — has built one of the most distinctive regional industrial economies in the American South over the past half century. Tupelo is known nationally as the furniture capital of America, home to hundreds of furniture manufacturers and suppliers whose roots go back to the mid-20th century when local entrepreneurs built the industry from scratch. That furniture manufacturing base has been supplemented over the decades by automotive suppliers, food processing plants, logistics operations, and — most significantly in recent years — the Toyota Motor Manufacturing Mississippi plant that opened in Blue Springs (Union County) in 2011 and employs thousands of workers from across the region.
Pontotoc County benefits from its proximity to all of this activity without being fully absorbed into the Tupelo metro’s higher cost structure. Workers employed at Toyota, at furniture plants in Lee or Union counties, at North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo, or at any of dozens of other northeast Mississippi manufacturers often choose to live in Pontotoc County because housing — both for purchase and for rent — is meaningfully more affordable there than in the Tupelo market itself. This creates a commuter segment in the Pontotoc rental market that is economically stronger than the county’s own employment base alone would suggest.
Within Pontotoc County itself, manufacturing is also the dominant private sector employer. The county has attracted its own share of industrial operations over the years, and the Pontotoc city area has a base of manufacturing, food processing, and industrial employment that provides year-round hourly work to a substantial share of the county’s workforce. These local manufacturing workers, combined with Tupelo-area commuters and the county’s public sector employment base (schools, county government, healthcare), create a rental tenant pool that is more economically diverse and stable than in many of Mississippi’s poorer counties.
Screening Manufacturing and Industrial Workers in Pontotoc County
Manufacturing workers in northeast Mississippi typically earn hourly wages, often in the range of $15–$25 per hour for line and skilled production positions, with overtime available at busy production periods. The key screening consideration is variability: a manufacturing worker’s take-home pay can fluctuate meaningfully from month to month depending on overtime availability, plant shutdowns, and shift assignments. A single pay stub from a heavy overtime week presents a misleadingly high income picture; a stub from a slow week with a plant holiday may look inadequate. The correct approach is to request the three most recent pay stubs and calculate the average gross income per pay period, then annualize it. This gives you a realistic income baseline that smooths out week-to-week variance.
For workers employed at large, established plants — Toyota, major furniture manufacturers, medical device companies — length of employment is a meaningful stability indicator. A worker who has been at the same plant for three or more years has demonstrated job stability and is unlikely to lose income suddenly. A new hire at the same plant is a higher-risk applicant not because of the employer but because of the probationary period risk; many manufacturing plants have 90-day or six-month probationary periods during which termination rates are higher. Consider requiring a slightly higher security deposit or a co-signer for applicants within their first six months at a new employer.
Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law Applied in Pontotoc County
Pontotoc 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). Mississippi requires landlords to maintain rental property in a habitable condition — structurally sound, weathertight, and equipped with functioning plumbing, heating, and electrical systems. Security deposits are not capped by statute; 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.
All eviction proceedings are filed in Pontotoc County Justice Court, 11 E. Washington Street, Pontotoc, MS 38863, phone (662) 489-3900. Pontotoc County has no County Court. For nonpayment, serve a written 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under § 89-7-27. For lease violations, serve a 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate under § 89-8-13. Serve all notices in a documentable manner and retain proof. After the notice period, file a sworn Complaint for Unlawful Entry and Detainer at Justice Court; the Sheriff serves the summons, a hearing is set within one to two weeks, and the judge rules. Uncontested evictions in Pontotoc County typically resolve within two to eight weeks of filing.
For landlords in the Pontotoc market, the most important documentation practices are: a signed written lease for every tenancy, a photographic move-in and move-out inspection signed by both parties, a written rent ledger documenting every payment received, and certified mail or personal service documentation for every notice served. These four records — lease, inspection, ledger, notice proof — are the core of any successful Justice Court eviction or deposit dispute defense.
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 Pontotoc County Justice Court at (662) 489-3900 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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