FightMyPark

Selling a mobile home in Mississippi

Mississippi has no dedicated mobile home park act and no statutory right to sell a home in place, no buyer-approval limits, and no ban on sale commissions or transfer fees. A resident's ability to sell the home where it sits is governed by the written lease and the park's rules, and the home transfers through its Mississippi certificate of title.

Published June 3, 2026

Mississippi has no dedicated mobile home park act, so it provides none of the sell-in-place, buyer-approval, or commission protections that many other states give park residents. A resident's ability to sell the home where it sits is governed by the written lease and the park's rules, and the home transfers through its certificate of title. The information below describes how the law generally works; anyone selling should consider consulting a licensed attorney in Mississippi.

What the statute says

Mississippi has no mobile-home-park statute addressing the sale of a home in place, buyer approval, "for sale" signs, or sale commissions. The Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Miss. Code Title 89, Chapter 8) governs the rental relationship for a covered dwelling but does not create a right to sell a resident-owned home on the lot or limit what a park may require of a buyer. The home itself is personal property titled by the Mississippi Department of Revenue under the motor-vehicle title law (Miss. Code Title 63, Chapter 21), and a sale transfers that certificate of title.

How it works in general

Because Mississippi has no dedicated park act, selling a mobile home that sits on a rented lot turns almost entirely on the written lease and the park's rules. There is no statute that stops a park from refusing to rent the lot to your buyer, requiring the home to be removed when it's sold, charging a sale commission or transfer fee, or restricting a "for sale" sign — so whatever the lease and rules say will usually control. The home itself is transferred by reassigning its Mississippi certificate of title (or, if it was converted to real property on land the seller owns, with the land). Given the lack of statutory protection, reading the lease and park rules before listing the home is especially important in Mississippi.

Common scenarios

General examples Mississippi park residents commonly encounter:

  • A resident wants to sell the home in place. There's no sell-in-place statute; the lease and park rules control.
  • A park demands a commission or transfer fee. No statute bans it — check the lease.
  • The home changes hands. Ownership transfers through the Mississippi certificate of title (Miss. Code title 63, ch. 21).

Other authorities that may apply

Mississippi's lack of a dedicated park act means the written lease, the park rules, and general contract law govern a sale; the home transfers through its Department of Revenue certificate of title. Federal law such as the Fair Housing Act can apply to buyer screening, and the bill of sale and any financing documents also control. This guide flags the absence of sell-in-place protections honestly.

Frequently asked questions

Does Mississippi let me sell my mobile home in place in the park?
There is no Mississippi statute guaranteeing a right to sell the home in place. Mississippi has no dedicated mobile home park act, so whether you can sell the home and leave it on the lot — and whether the buyer can rent the lot — is governed by your written lease and the park's rules. This is general information, not advice about a specific sale — consider consulting a licensed attorney in Mississippi.
Can a Mississippi park charge a commission or transfer fee when I sell?
Mississippi has no statute banning a sale commission, transfer fee, or entrance fee in a mobile home park, and no statute limiting a park's approval of your buyer. Whether the park can charge such a fee or refuse your buyer depends on the written lease and general law — read the lease carefully before listing the home.
How does the home itself transfer in Mississippi?
Through its Mississippi certificate of title. A manufactured or mobile home is titled by the Mississippi Department of Revenue (Miss. Code title 63, chapter 21), and ownership transfers by reassigning that certificate of title, unless the title has been cancelled because the home was permanently affixed and converted to real property.

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