Lease Snipe

Mississippi Required Disclosures

2 required disclosures

Mississippi law requires landlords to provide certain disclosures — our database tracks 2 for Mississippi, each backed by a statute. Timing varies by disclosure (many are due at lease signing; some arise later in the tenancy — each entry below states its own rule). A missing required disclosure can expose the landlord to penalties and may give you leverage.

Educational information: generated from our Mississippi law database (last updated 2024-01-01). Not legal advice.

Every disclosure Mississippi landlords must provide

  • Lead Paint

    Disclosure of known lead-based paint hazards for housing built before 1978

    Legal basis: 42 U.S.C. 4852d

  • Landlord Identity

    Name and address of landlord or authorized agent

    Legal basis: Mississippi Code Section 89-8-19

Frequently asked questions

What disclosures must a landlord provide in Mississippi?
Mississippi requires: Lead Paint (Disclosure of known lead-based paint hazards for housing built before 1978); Landlord Identity (Name and address of landlord or authorized agent).
What happens if a Mississippi landlord fails to provide a required disclosure?
Consequences vary by disclosure — from statutory penalties to giving the tenant grounds to challenge related lease terms.

Check Your Lease Against Mississippi Law

Not sure whether your lease complies with Mississippi law? Upload it and our analyzer flags problem clauses — deposit terms, entry rights, fees and prohibited provisions — using the same statute-backed database this page is generated from.

Analyze My Lease Free

Educational tool — not legal advice. First analysis is free, no signup required.

More Mississippi lease law guides

Required Disclosures in other states

Educational information generated from state statute data — not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in Mississippi for your specific situation.