Mississippi At-Will Employment Laws: Exceptions and Your Rights

Mississippi At-Will Employment Laws: Exceptions and Your Rights
Mississippi is an at-will employment state, meaning an employer may terminate an employee for any reason or no reason at all, provided the reason is not an illegal one. The at-will doctrine is the longstanding default rule under Mississippi common law.
Is Mississippi an at-will employment state?
Yes. Mississippi follows the at-will employment doctrine as its default rule. Under that doctrine, either the employer or the employee may end the employment relationship at any time, for any reason, or for no stated reason at all, without incurring legal liability. This rule applies to most private-sector workers in the state. There is no Mississippi statute codifying at-will employment; it is a rule of common law that Mississippi courts have consistently applied. The rule means that an employer is generally not required to warn you before terminating you, give you a reason, or follow any progressive discipline process, unless it has created a specific obligation to do so.
Exceptions to at-will employment in Mississippi
Mississippi recognizes two of the three common-law exceptions, though both are applied narrowly.

Public-policy exception (recognized, narrow). The Mississippi Supreme Court recognized a public-policy exception in McArn v. Allied Bruce-Terminix, 626 So.2d 603 (Miss. 1993). That decision limits the exception to exactly two categories: an employee who is discharged for refusing to participate in an illegal act, and an employee who is discharged for reporting the employer's illegal acts to the employer or to a third party. Courts apply the McArn categories strictly. A termination that seems unfair or retaliatory but does not fit one of those two precise categories will generally not qualify as a wrongful discharge under Mississippi law. The narrowness of the exception sets Mississippi apart from states with broader public-policy protections.
Implied-contract exception (limited). Mississippi courts have held that an employer-issued policy manual can create an implied contract if the manual sets out disciplinary procedures and contains no effective disclaimer stating that the manual does not alter the at-will relationship. Bobbitt v. The Orchard, Ltd., 603 So.2d 356 (Miss. 1992) is the leading case. If an employer publishes a manual with progressive discipline steps and no clear disclaimer, and then skips those steps before firing an employee, the employee may have a breach-of-implied-contract claim. Employers routinely include at-will disclaimers in their handbooks precisely to preserve the at-will relationship, so in practice this exception is invoked less often than it might appear.
Covenant of good faith and fair dealing (not recognized). Mississippi does not recognize a general covenant of good faith and fair dealing in the employment context. Absent a specific contractual provision, an employer in Mississippi does not owe a duty to act in good faith when deciding to terminate an employee. This means a termination motivated by bad motives alone, short of fitting the McArn public-policy categories or violating an implied contract, will not support a wrongful-discharge claim on a good-faith theory.
Is Mississippi a right-to-work state?
Yes. Mississippi is one of 26 right-to-work states as of 2026. The right is enshrined in the Mississippi Constitution at Article 7, Section 198-A, which provides that no person may be required to join a union or pay union dues as a condition of employment. Michigan repealed its right-to-work law effective February 13, 2024, dropping the national count from 27 to 26.
Right-to-work is often confused with at-will employment, but the two concepts are entirely distinct. Right-to-work governs the relationship between workers, unions, and employers: it prevents union membership or financial support to a union from being made a condition of keeping or getting a job. At-will employment governs whether and why an employer can end the employment relationship. A right-to-work state can have strong wrongful-termination protections, and an at-will state can have active union workplaces. In Mississippi, both rules apply, but they operate on separate tracks.
What at-will employment does not allow in Mississippi
At-will employment has real limits at the federal level, and those limits apply to every Mississippi employer. No employer in Mississippi may fire an employee for a protected characteristic. Federal statutes that prohibit this include:

- Title VII of the Civil Rights Act (race, color, religion, sex, national origin)
- Americans with Disabilities Act (disability)
- Age Discrimination in Employment Act (age 40 and older)
- Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (genetic information)
- Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (pregnancy-related conditions requiring accommodation)
- Equal Pay Act (sex-based wage discrimination)
Federal law also prohibits retaliation against an employee for engaging in protected activity. Protected activity includes reporting workplace safety hazards under OSHA, filing a wage complaint under the FLSA, requesting leave under the FMLA, engaging in concerted activity with coworkers under the NLRA, reporting securities fraud, or asserting veterans' rights under USERRA.
Mississippi's own anti-discrimination law adds to these protections. The at-will rule does not override any of these statutes. An employer who fires a worker because of race, because the worker complained to the EEOC, or because the worker refused an assignment that violated a federal safety rule is acting unlawfully, regardless of at-will status.
If you were fired in Mississippi
At-will employment means your employer was generally not required to give you a reason for your termination. However, the absence of a stated reason does not mean the actual reason was lawful. If the real reason for your discharge was an illegal one, you may have a legal claim.

Start by documenting everything you can remember: the date and circumstances of the termination, any reason given, any prior discipline, whether you had recently complained about anything at work, and any written policies or handbooks your employer distributed. Compare what happened to the McArn public-policy categories (did you refuse to do something illegal, or report illegal conduct?), the Bobbitt implied-contract theory (did your employer have a handbook with disciplinary steps and no disclaimer?), and the federal floor (was a protected characteristic or protected activity a likely motive?).
Deadlines are short and non-negotiable. To file a charge of discrimination with the EEOC you generally have 180 days from the date of the termination (or 300 days if a state agency has a worksharing agreement). Missing the deadline forfeits the claim. Consulting an employment attorney as soon as possible after termination gives you the best chance of preserving your options.
This article is general legal information, not legal advice. Employment law varies by state and changes frequently, and it is not a substitute for advice about a specific termination. For guidance on your situation, consult a licensed employment attorney in Mississippi.
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Sources
- McArn v. Allied Bruce-Terminix Co., 626 So.2d 603 (Miss. 1993) (recognizing narrow public-policy exception to at-will employment)
- Bobbitt v. The Orchard, Ltd., 603 So.2d 356 (Miss. 1992) (implied-contract exception based on employee handbook)
- Mississippi Constitution, Article 7, Section 198-A (right-to-work): https://www.sos.ms.gov/content/documents/ed_pubs/pubs/Mississippi_Constitution.pdf
- U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Filing a Charge: https://www.eeoc.gov/filing-charge-discrimination
Related: At-Will Employment by State | Whistleblower Protections