Mississippi Emancipation Laws: Removing the Disabilities of Minority (2026)

Mississippi Emancipation Laws: Removing the Disabilities of Minority (2026)
Mississippi sets its age of majority at 21 under Miss. Code Ann. 1-3-27, the highest in the nation. A chancery court may remove the disabilities of minority under Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-1 through 93-19-13, freeing a minor to act in legal and financial matters without waiting until 21. Marriage and full-time military service also terminate minority status automatically.
Information last verified on May 31, 2026.
What Does Emancipation Mean in Mississippi, and Why Does Age 21 Matter?
In every U.S. state, there is an age at which a person becomes a legal adult with full capacity to act in their own name. Mississippi sets that threshold at 21 under Miss. Code Ann. 1-3-27, which defines a "minor" as any person under twenty-one years of age. That single statutory fact makes Mississippi an outlier: every other state sets the general age of majority at 18 or 19.
The practical consequences are significant. An 18-year-old Mississippian can vote, enlist in the military, and enter personal-property contracts, yet they remain a legal minor for most other purposes. Without a court order or another emancipating event, a person between 18 and 20 in Mississippi cannot independently lease an apartment, sign a deed, enter a mortgage, file certain lawsuits in their own name, or make binding contracts about real estate until they turn 21.
Emancipation, the removal of the disabilities of minority, ends those restrictions before the 21st birthday. Mississippi law does not use the word "emancipation" prominently in its statutes; the governing chapters instead use the phrase "removal of the disabilities of minority." Courts, legal aid guides, and the Mississippi Administrative Office of Courts all treat the two terms as interchangeable.
Mississippi does not have a single, standalone emancipation statute the way California or New York does. Instead, the legal framework is found in two places: Title 93, Chapter 19 of the Mississippi Code (the chancery court procedure) and several scattered provisions that grant automatic legal capacity in specific circumstances.
Automatic Capacity at 18: What Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-13 Does
Before examining the chancery court petition, it is worth understanding what happens at age 18 without any court order. Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-13 provides that all persons eighteen years of age or older have the capacity to enter into binding contractual relationships affecting personal property, mortgages and real property, provided they are not otherwise disqualified or prohibited by law.

This is a targeted, automatic partial removal of the disabilities of minority. It means that an 18-year-old Mississippian may already:
- Open and maintain bank accounts and sign related agreements
- Enter service contracts, employment agreements, and consumer transactions
- Settle personal injury claims and sign releases
- Sue and be sued on personal-property contracts
Since SB2073 (eff. July 1, 2023), Section 93-19-13 also covers mortgages and real property, so an 18-year-old Mississippian may already buy, sell, mortgage, and lease land or buildings without a court order. What 93-19-13 still does not confer is the broader set of adult capacities (such as choosing a legal domicile, managing an estate, engaging in a profession or trade under full adult status, and suing and being sued in all matters, which remain the province of a general chancery court decree under 93-19-9.
Removal of the Disabilities of Minority: The Chancery Court Procedure
Which Court Has Jurisdiction
Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-1 vests jurisdiction in the chancery court of the county where the minor resides. If the matter concerns real estate, the chancery court of the county where the real estate is located also has jurisdiction over transactions involving that property. The jurisdiction of the chancery court in these proceedings is that of a court of general equity jurisdiction.
Who Files the Petition
The minor files the petition through a "next friend", a responsible adult who represents the minor's interests in the proceeding. Parents or other adults may serve in that role. Under Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-5, the petition must be made in writing by the minor through their next friend, stating the minor's age and the reasons for seeking removal of the disability.
The living parent or parents are named as defendants and must be served with process. If both parents are deceased, two adult relatives within the third degree under civil law must be joined as defendants. The only situation in which no defendant is required is when no parent is living and no relative within the prescribed degree has a known residence.
The statute sets no minimum age for the petition. Any minor may file. In practice, the procedure is most commonly used by persons aged 18, 19, or 20 who need full legal independence before turning 21.
The Scope of the Decree
Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-9 gives the chancellor two options when granting the petition.
A partial decree removes the disability only as to a specific act or transaction named in the order. For example, a minor might seek the right to sign a particular lease or complete a specific real estate sale without obtaining broader independence.
A general decree empowers the minor to do all acts in reference to their property, making contracts, suing and being sued, and engaging in any profession or trade, as fully as if they were eighteen (18) years of age (as amended by SB2073, eff. July 1, 2023). The decree must state distinctly the extent to which the disability is removed and what acts the minor is empowered to perform. The court may impose such restrictions and qualifications as it considers appropriate.
Once the judge signs the order, the minor is emancipated to the extent specified. Until that happens, parental or guardian consent remains required for the actions covered by the petition.
What the Petition Should Include
While Mississippi Code does not prescribe a detailed checklist, practitioners and the Mississippi Administrative Office of Courts guidance indicate the petition should address:
- The minor's name, age, and county of residence
- The names and addresses of the living parents (or qualifying kin)
- The specific legal acts or general independence being requested
- The reasons establishing that the removal of disability serves the minor's interest
The filing fee and any notice requirements are set by local chancery court rules and may vary by county.
Other Routes to Emancipation: Marriage and Military Service
Marriage

A married minor in Mississippi is not under the general disability of minority for purposes of actions involving marital rights under Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-11. More broadly, Miss. Code Ann. 93-11-65 lists marriage as one of the events that terminates child support obligations, recognizing it as an emancipating event.
Under Miss. Code Ann. 93-1-5, every male at least 17 years old and every female at least 15 years old may legally marry. Persons under 21 must present satisfactory evidence of parental or guardian consent to the circuit clerk. If an applicant is below the statutory minimum age (under 17 for males, under 15 for females), a judge of any circuit, chancery, or county court in the county of residence may, upon proof of good cause and parental consent, authorize the marriage by written instrument.
Because Mississippi sets no absolute floor on marriage age by statute (a judicial waiver can apply to younger minors), marriage-based emancipation is possible at any age where a valid marriage occurs, though parental consent and, for very young minors, a judicial waiver are prerequisites.
Full-Time Military Service
Mississippi law explicitly recognizes full-time military enlistment as an emancipating event. Under Miss. Code Ann. 93-11-65, child support terminates when a child "joins the military and serves on a full-time basis." Active-duty military service carries with it the practical legal independence that federal military law confers, the ability to enter contracts on base, manage pay, and establish domicile, and Mississippi courts treat full-time service as ending the parent-child support obligation without a separate court order.
What Removing the Disabilities of Minority Grants, and What It Does Not
What a General Decree Grants
Under a general removal decree, the minor may act as if they are eighteen (18) years of age. They can:
- Buy, sell, mortgage, and lease real property in their own name
- Enter any contract, including business and professional agreements
- Sue and be sued in their own name in all matters
- Choose their own legal domicile
- Manage personal and real property, including receiving rents and running a business
- Consent to their own medical treatment in contexts where parental consent would otherwise be required
What No Emancipation Can Change
Removing the disabilities of minority does not override rights and restrictions set by other bodies of law:
- Voting: The U.S. Constitution's 26th Amendment sets the voting age at 18. Emancipation does not affect voting eligibility.
- Alcohol: Mississippi law and federal law require a person to be 21 to purchase or consume alcohol. A 19-year-old with a general removal decree still may not buy alcohol.
- Child labor: Federal Fair Labor Standards Act protections and Mississippi child labor rules attach based on actual age, not emancipated status. Work-hour and hazardous-job restrictions for minors under 16 and 18 still apply.
- Federal age requirements: Many federal programs and licenses (e.g., certain firearms rules, commercial driver's licenses, federal student loan co-signing) use actual age thresholds that state emancipation cannot override.
How Emancipation Affects Child Support and College Financial Aid in Mississippi
Child Support

Miss. Code Ann. 93-11-65 sets out the events that terminate child support in Mississippi. The duty of support ends when a child:
- Attains the age of twenty-one
- Marries
- Joins the military and serves on a full-time basis
- Is convicted of a felony and sentenced to incarceration of two or more years
The Mississippi Supreme Court held in Caldwell v. Caldwell, 579 So. 2d 543, that emancipation means the child is "freed for all the period of its minority from the care, custody, control, and service of its parents." Courts also look at whether the child has achieved genuine financial independence, living separately, employed full-time, and no longer relying on parents, before terminating support under the discretionary prongs of 93-11-65.
A court-ordered general removal of the disabilities of minority is not itself listed in 93-11-65 as an automatic termination event, but if the minor achieves full independent living as part of the circumstances surrounding the decree, a court may exercise its discretion to modify the support order. Anyone holding or paying a support order should seek legal advice before assuming emancipation ends that obligation.
Child support arrearages, amounts already owed, remain payable after emancipation unless the court affirmatively orders otherwise.
For the broader national framework, see the child support laws by state guide and the emancipation laws by state hub.
FAFSA and Federal Financial Aid
Federal student aid regulations treat a student who "is or was an emancipated minor (as determined by a court in the student's state of legal residence)" as an independent student for FAFSA purposes, meaning the parents' income and assets are not counted in the expected family contribution calculation. The U.S. Department of Education's studentaid.gov guidance confirms this standard.
A Mississippi chancery court general decree removing the disabilities of minority should satisfy this definition, because it is a court determination made in the state of legal residence. Students seeking independent FAFSA status based on a Mississippi removal-of-disabilities order should provide a copy of the chancery court decree to their college financial aid office and confirm with the office that it meets the federal definition of emancipation. Limited or partial decrees that cover only specific transactions may not satisfy the federal standard.
It is also worth noting that Mississippi's 21-year age of majority means a person aged 18, 19, or 20 who is not emancipated is still a dependent minor under Mississippi law, which could affect dependency determinations on documents other than FAFSA.
Legal Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information and is not legal advice. Mississippi chancery court procedures involve local rules, judicial discretion, and facts specific to each case. Consult a licensed Mississippi attorney or a Mississippi legal aid organization before filing any petition.
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Sources
- Miss. Code Ann. 1-3-27 (Definition of minor; age of majority 21; amended by SB2073 to add 18-year contract-capacity exception): legislature.ms.gov (Title 1, Ch. 3)
- Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-1 (Removal of disability as to real estate; chancery court jurisdiction): legislature.ms.gov (Title 93, Ch. 19)
- Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-5 (Petition procedure; next friend; parents as defendants): legislature.ms.gov (Title 93, Ch. 19)
- Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-9 (Partial or general decree; scope of removal): legislature.ms.gov (Title 93, Ch. 19)
- Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-11 (Married minor not under disability for marital-rights actions): legislature.ms.gov (Title 93, Ch. 19)
- Miss. Code Ann. 93-19-13 (Persons 18 or older competent to contract in personal property matters): legislature.ms.gov (Title 93, Ch. 19)
- Miss. Code Ann. 93-1-5 (Marriage age requirements; parental consent): legislature.ms.gov (Title 93, Ch. 1)
- Miss. Code Ann. 93-11-65 (Child support termination upon emancipation, age 21, marriage, or military): legislature.ms.gov (Title 93, Ch. 11)
- Caldwell v. Caldwell, 579 So. 2d 543 (Miss. 1991) (Definition of emancipation under Mississippi law): courts.ms.gov
- How to File Your Removal of Disability of Minority/Emancipation (Mississippi Administrative Office of Courts): courts.ms.gov
- Federal Student Aid: Emancipated Minor (U.S. Department of Education): studentaid.gov
Last updated: May 31, 2026.