Mississippi HOA & Condo Association Laws

Mississippi’s condominium law is a horizontal-property-style statute; associations otherwise operate under their declarations and nonprofit-corporation law, making document quality decisive.

Which statutes apply in Mississippi?

Condominiums
Mississippi Condominium Law (Miss. Code Ann. § 89-9-1 et seq.)
HOAs / planned communities
No dedicated HOA statute — recorded declarations, bylaws, and state nonprofit-corporation law govern.

Key compliance rules for Mississippi boards and managers

  • Statute covers creation, common elements, and assessment liens
  • Governance details (meetings, records, fining) come from governing documents
  • Nonprofit law supplies default meeting and voting rules

Resale and disclosure requirements

No statutory resale certificate; associations provide account statements per documents.

Running associations in Mississippi?

Portier369 handles the operational side of Mississippi compliance — official records, owner and board notices, reserve and budget tracking, violation due process, and document packages — in one platform built for community association managers.

Frequently asked questions

What law governs condo associations in Mississippi?

Condominiums in Mississippi are governed by the Mississippi Condominium Law (Miss. Code Ann. § 89-9-1 et seq.). Homeowners associations are generally governed by their recorded declarations, bylaws, and state nonprofit-corporation law.

Are resale disclosures required in Mississippi?

No statutory resale certificate; associations provide account statements per documents.

What software helps Mississippi associations stay compliant?

Association management software like Portier369 supports the operational side of Mississippi compliance: maintaining official records, distributing meeting notices, tracking reserves and budgets, running violation due process with notices and hearings, and assembling resale document packages.

Nearby state guides

This guide is an educational summary, not legal advice. Statutes are amended regularly — confirm current law with an attorney licensed in Mississippi before acting.