Tunica County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: A Complete Guide for Rental Property Owners in Tunica, the Casino Corridor, and the Mississippi River Delta
No county in Mississippi has a more dramatic economic story than Tunica County. In 1985, CBS News correspondent Charles Kuralt visited and called it the poorest place in America — a distinction backed by census data showing median household incomes and poverty rates that placed Tunica County at or near the absolute bottom of every economic ranking in the country. Then, seven years later, the first casino opened on the Mississippi River levee just south of the town, and within a decade everything changed. By the late 1990s, Tunica County was being called the third-largest gaming market in the United States. Tax revenues that had funded near-nothing now built new schools, roads, and infrastructure. The unemployment rate that had hovered near 20% plummeted. The county that had been a symbol of American rural failure became a case study — celebrated and scrutinized in equal measure — of what gaming revenue could do to a poor community in a short span of time. For landlords operating in Tunica County today, understanding both the rise and the subsequent contraction of that casino economy is essential context for every decision you make.
The Casino Economy: Rise, Peak, and Contraction
The Tunica casino boom was real and transformative. At its peak in the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Tunica casino corridor — a stretch of Highway 61 and the river levee road in the unincorporated community of Robinsonville — hosted more than a dozen major casino-hotel complexes: Grand Casino Tunica, Harrah’s Tunica, Hollywood Casino, Sam’s Town, Horseshoe Tunica, Fitzgerald’s, Bally’s, and others. Each property employed hundreds to thousands of workers in gaming, food and beverage, hotel, security, and support functions. The county’s workforce doubled and tripled; workers commuted from Memphis, from DeSoto County, from across the Delta. The rental market in Tunica County, which had consisted largely of substandard housing serving an impoverished agricultural workforce, was transformed almost overnight by demand from casino workers seeking affordable housing within commuting distance of the corridor.
That peak is now history. Competition from tribal gaming in neighboring states, particularly the Cherokee casinos in North Carolina and the proliferation of gaming across the South and Midwest, drew millions of former Tunica visitors to more convenient alternatives. The expansion of Gulf Coast gaming in Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina rebuilt that market drew more. Several major Tunica casino properties have closed permanently — Grand Casino, Bally’s, Fitzgerald’s, and others that once anchored the corridor are gone. The properties that remain are operating in a smaller, more competitive market with lower visitor volumes and reduced workforces. The county’s poverty rate, which had dropped dramatically during the boom years, has climbed back above 35% as the casino economy contracted and alternative employment failed to materialize at comparable scale.
What This Means for Landlords: Screening Casino Workers in 2026
Casino and hospitality workers remain the dominant private sector employment segment in Tunica County, and they will be a primary component of your rental applicant pool. Screening them requires understanding both the nature of casino employment income and the specific employment risk factors in this particular market. On income verification: casino floor workers — dealers, slot attendants, cage cashiers, food service staff — earn hourly wages supplemented by tips in many roles, with income that can vary meaningfully from month to month depending on shift assignments, casino traffic, and overtime availability. A single recent pay stub is a poor income baseline. Request three months of pay stubs and average them to get a realistic sense of normal monthly income. For tipped employees, consider requesting bank statements to see actual deposit patterns alongside the pay stubs.
On employment stability: before accepting a casino worker applicant, verify that their employer — the specific casino property — is currently operating. This is not a standard screening question in most markets, but it is a reasonable one in Tunica County given the documented history of casino closures. A quick online search or a call to verify employment with the casino’s HR department confirms both current employment and the property’s operating status. Length of employment at the current property is the most meaningful stability indicator available for casino workers in this market: a dealer who has worked at the same property for five years has demonstrated both the employment relationship and the casino’s continued viability over that period.
The Memphis Commuter and Agricultural Worker Segments
Beyond casino employment, Tunica County’s tenant pool includes a modest Memphis commuter segment — residents who work in Memphis or DeSoto County for employment in distribution, healthcare, or professional services, and who live in Tunica County for lower housing costs. The county is approximately 30 miles south of Memphis via US-61, a commute that some households are willing to make for the significantly lower rents available in Tunica County versus the Memphis suburbs. These commuter tenants typically have stronger and more stable incomes than casino-dependent workers and are worth specifically targeting in your marketing if you have well-maintained properties in the $500–$650 range.
Large-scale agriculture — cotton, soybeans, and row crops on the rich Mississippi River bottomland soils of the Delta — continues in Tunica County, though highly mechanized farming provides limited year-round wage employment. Public sector employment at Tunica County School District and county government provides the most stable and predictable local income segment. And for a large share of the rental pool, SSI, SSDI, Social Security, and Housing Choice Vouchers are the primary income sources — reflecting the poverty rate that has climbed back toward the levels that defined the county before the casino era. Landlords should approach screening in this market with the same adapted framework described for other extreme-poverty Delta counties: prioritize rental history, income stability, and the reliability of the income source over rigid private-employment income multipliers.
Mississippi Law and the Eviction Process in Tunica County
Tunica 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). Landlords must maintain habitable conditions — structurally sound, weathertight, functioning plumbing, heating, and electrical systems. Security deposits are not capped; 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 at Tunica County Justice Court, 1 Court Square, Tunica, MS 38676, phone (662) 363-1541. Tunica County has no County Court. Begin with the appropriate written notice: a 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate for nonpayment under § 89-7-27, or a 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate for lease violations under § 89-8-13. Serve by certified mail with return receipt or personal service with a witness. After the notice period, file a sworn Complaint for Unlawful Entry and Detainer. The Tunica County Sheriff serves the summons, a hearing is scheduled, and the judge rules. Uncontested evictions typically resolve within two to six weeks. Retain all documentation — signed lease, notice with proof of service, rent ledger, and move-in inspection records — to be fully prepared for any hearing.
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 Tunica County Justice Court at (662) 363-1541 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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