Mississippi
Mississippi Probate and Intestate Succession: What Happens Without a Will (2026)

Mississippi handles probate and intestate succession entirely through the Chancery Court of the county where the deceased lived, since the state has no separate probate court. A 2023-2024 reform substantially raised the dollar thresholds for two of the state's faster, simplified alternatives to full administration.
Information last verified on 2026-07-16. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
How Probate Works in Mississippi
Mississippi is one of a small number of states with no dedicated probate court. The Chancery Court of the county where the decedent lived at death validates the will if one exists, appoints an executor or administrator, and supervises administration of the estate. Mississippi has not adopted the Uniform Probate Code, so it does not use the "formal" and "informal" procedural labels common in Uniform Probate Code states. Instead it offers three distinct paths, chosen based on whether a will exists and how large the estate is. Full, or regular, Administration is the standard court-supervised process used for estates that do not qualify for a simplified option. Muniment of Title, available only when there is a valid will, lets an estate with personal property at or under the statutory cap skip appointing an executor entirely, since the will itself, once admitted to record by the Chancery Court, serves as proof of the heirs' title to the decedent's property. The Small Estate Affidavit of Successor is the fastest path, letting qualifying heirs collect a decedent's assets by sworn affidavit rather than filing any Chancery Court petition at all.
Mississippi's 2023-2024 probate reform, enacted through SB 2850 and SB 2851, substantially expanded who can use the two simplified tracks by raising both dollar thresholds. Before the reform, the Small Estate Affidavit of Successor was capped at $50,000 in personal property and Muniment of Title was capped at $10,000. Both now sit at $75,000. Many older online sources still cite the pre-reform figures, so readers relying on out-of-date guidance may believe an estate needs full Chancery Court administration when it now qualifies for a simplified track.
For estates that do go through full Administration, the general sequence still applies: the Chancery Court appoints an executor named in the will, or an administrator if there is no will or the named executor cannot serve; the personal representative inventories and values the estate's assets; creditors get a window, about 90 days in Mississippi, to file claims; and once valid debts are paid, the remaining assets are distributed to the heirs or beneficiaries under Chancery Court supervision.
Intestate Succession in Mississippi: Who Inherits Without a Will
When a Mississippi resident dies without a valid will, Mississippi Code Section 91-1-7 governs how property passes between spouse and descendants, while Section 91-1-3 governs the broader order of descent when there is no surviving spouse or descendant. If the decedent leaves no children or other descendants, the surviving spouse takes the entire estate. If the decedent leaves children, whether from that marriage or an earlier relationship, the surviving spouse does not automatically take a preferential share the way spouses do in many other states. Instead, the spouse and each child, or each line of descendants if a child predeceased the decedent, split the estate equally as coheirs. With one surviving child, the spouse and child each take half. With two surviving children, the spouse and the two children each take a third. Mississippi is not a community property state, so this statutory division applies to the decedent's entire probate estate rather than to only a spousal share of jointly accumulated property.

If no spouse or descendant survives, Section 91-1-3 directs the estate to the decedent's brothers, sisters, father, and mother in equal parts, with the descendants of a deceased sibling taking that sibling's share by representation. If none of those relatives survive, the estate passes to grandparents and aunts and uncles in equal parts. Beyond that, Mississippi law reaches more distant next of kin in equal degree, computed under the state's civil-law method of computation, before an estate would ever escheat to the state, which happens only when no qualifying relative can be located at all.
One way to make sure your property goes to the people you actually choose, rather than following Mississippi's intestate succession order, is to have a valid will in place. recordinglaw.com's free Mississippi Last Will and Testament Generator can help you create one, with no account required.
Small Estate and Simplified Probate in Mississippi
Mississippi offers two simplified alternatives to full Chancery Court administration, and the state's 2023-2024 reform raised the dollar ceiling on both.
The Small Estate Affidavit of Successor lets qualifying heirs collect a decedent's personal property, such as bank accounts, without any Chancery Court petition. It is available when the estate's personal property does not exceed $75,000, at least 30 days have passed since death, and no personal representative has already been appointed or has a pending appointment. In practice, the surviving spouse is generally the person who uses the affidavit; where there is no surviving spouse or children, either parent of the decedent may use it instead.
Muniment of Title serves a different purpose. It applies only when the decedent left a valid will and the estate's personal property does not exceed $75,000. Rather than appointing an executor to administer the estate, the heirs record the will itself with the Chancery Court, and the recorded will becomes the heirs' proof of title to the decedent's property. This route can be faster than full Administration precisely because it skips the step of appointing and supervising a personal representative.
Neither simplified option is available for every estate. Larger estates, estates with significant real property complications, or estates where an executor needs authority to manage ongoing business affairs or resolve disputed claims typically still require full Administration through the Chancery Court.
Does Mississippi Have an Estate or Inheritance Tax?
Mississippi has no state estate tax. The Mississippi Department of Revenue confirms that no estate tax return is required for deaths occurring on or after January 1, 2005. Mississippi also has no state inheritance tax and no state gift tax. Only the federal estate tax can apply to a Mississippi estate, and in 2026 that tax exempts the first $15,000,000 per person, meaning it affects only a very small number of the largest estates nationally.
Do You Need a Probate Attorney?
Many straightforward Mississippi estates, especially those that qualify for the Small Estate Affidavit of Successor or Muniment of Title, can move through the process without hiring a probate attorney. An attorney becomes genuinely worth engaging when a will is likely to be contested, when heirship must be judicially determined because family relationships are unclear or disputed, when the estate includes a business interest, or when the estate is a blended family situation that intestate succession's fixed categories do not handle cleanly. For a broader look at when a probate attorney is worth the cost, see Probate by State.

Disclaimer
This article provides general information about probate and intestate succession in Mississippi as of the verification date above. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. It is not a substitute for advice from a probate attorney licensed in Mississippi, particularly for a contested estate, a disputed heirship determination, a business interest, or a blended family. Dollar thresholds and statutes change; verify current figures directly with the Mississippi Chancery Court or the cited official source before relying on any figure here.

Last updated: 2026-07-16. Figures and statutes cited reflect their in-force version as of 2026-07-16.
Frequently Asked Questions
What court handles probate in Mississippi?
Mississippi has no separate probate court. Wills and estates are handled by the Chancery Court of the county where the decedent resided at death.
Does Mississippi have an inheritance tax?
No. Mississippi has no state inheritance tax, no state gift tax, and no state estate tax. Only the federal estate tax, which exempts the first $15,000,000 per person in 2026, can apply.
What is Mississippi's small estate affidavit threshold?
The Small Estate Affidavit of Successor is available for estates with personal property up to $75,000, following Mississippi's 2023-2024 reform under SB 2850 and SB 2851, which raised the threshold from $50,000. At least 30 days must pass after death before it can be used.
Who inherits if you die without a will in Mississippi?
Under Mississippi Code Section 91-1-7, a surviving spouse takes the entire estate if there are no children. If there are children, the spouse and each child split the estate equally as coheirs, regardless of which relationship the children come from.
What is Muniment of Title in Mississippi?
Muniment of Title lets heirs record a decedent's valid will directly with the Chancery Court as proof of title, without appointing an executor, when the estate's personal property does not exceed $75,000.
How long does probate take in Mississippi?
A simple, uncontested Chancery Court estate commonly closes within about 6 to 12 months. Mississippi's creditor-claim period runs about 90 days, and cases requiring a judicial determination of heirship can take 9 to 12 months or longer.
Does having a will avoid probate in Mississippi?
No. A will still typically needs to go through the Chancery Court, though Muniment of Title can simplify that process for smaller estates. What a will accomplishes is letting you choose who inherits instead of Mississippi's intestate succession statute.
Sources and References
- Cornell Law School, Legal Information Institute, "Descent and Distribution" (general concept; Mississippi Code Section 91-1-7 governs the specific spouse/children division. Mississippi's official code is published exclusively through a paywalled Lexis portal with no free .gov mirror)(law.cornell.edu)
- Cornell Law School, Legal Information Institute, "Inheritance" (general concept; Mississippi Code Section 91-1-3 governs the specific order of descent to more distant kin. Mississippi's official code is published exclusively through a paywalled Lexis portal with no free .gov mirror)(law.cornell.edu)
- Mississippi Department of Revenue, Estate Tax(dor.ms.gov).gov
- Summary of Mississippi's 2023-2024 Probate Reform (SB 2850 / SB 2851)(esapllc.com)
- Mississippi Small Estate Affidavit of Successor Overview(msprobate.com)
- IRS, "What's New - Estate and Gift Tax" (2026 basic exclusion amount)(irs.gov).gov
- Cornell Law School, Legal Information Institute, "Intestate Succession"(law.cornell.edu)