Mississippi
Mississippi Wrongful Death Laws (2026): Deadlines

When a person in Mississippi dies because of another party's negligence or wrongful act, state law lets the family pursue a wrongful death claim. Mississippi handles this through a single statute, Section 11-7-13 of the Mississippi Code, that combines what other states split into two separate lawsuits. One case carries both the survivors' losses and the deceased person's own claim. This guide explains how those rules work in plain language. It is general information and attorney advertising, not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship.
The deadline to file in Mississippi
Mississippi does not put a separate deadline inside its wrongful death statute. Instead, the time limit is borrowed from the limitations period that fits the underlying wrong that caused the death. For ordinary negligence, that is the state's general three-year limitations statute, Section 15-1-49, measured from the date of death. Where the death arose from a different kind of claim, such as one with its own shorter period, that period can control instead.
Because the applicable deadline turns on the type of conduct involved, families should not assume three years in every case. Claims against a government entity carry separate, shorter notice requirements under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act. Missing the deadline almost always ends the case, so confirming the exact date with a licensed Mississippi attorney early is important.
Who can file a wrongful death claim in Mississippi
Section 11-7-13 lists the people who may bring the action, and that list is exclusive. The action can be brought by the surviving spouse, a child, a parent, or a sibling of the deceased person, or by the personal representative of the estate on behalf of everyone entitled to recover. An interested party may bring the action whether or not an estate has been opened.
Mississippi allows only one wrongful death suit for any one death. Whoever files brings it for the benefit of all the statutory beneficiaries, not just for themselves, and the recovery is shared among those entitled to it. Because only one action is permitted, coordination among family members matters, and a single filing controls the case for the whole group of beneficiaries.
Wrongful death versus a survival action
Most states keep two separate claims: a wrongful death claim for what the survivors lost, and a survival action that continues the deceased person's own claim, such as pre-death pain and suffering, on behalf of the estate. Mississippi merges both into the single suit authorized by Section 11-7-13.

In that one case, the jury may consider all the damages of every kind to the deceased person and all the damages of every kind to the interested parties. So the survivors' losses, such as lost support and lost companionship, and the deceased person's own losses, such as the pain and suffering experienced between injury and death, are recovered together rather than in two filings. This combined structure is a defining feature of Mississippi practice and is why families often hear that there is one wrongful death suit rather than separate wrongful death and survival cases.
Damages you can recover
Mississippi courts have organized wrongful death damages into recognized categories. They include the present net cash value of the deceased person's life expectancy, which captures the financial support and value the person would have provided. They include the loss of the companionship and society of the deceased person, which compensates the survivors for the relationship itself. They include the pain and suffering the deceased person experienced between the injury and death, which flows from the survival portion of the combined claim. And they include funeral, medical, and related expenses incurred because of the death.
These categories let a Mississippi case reach both the economic and the relational harm a death causes. Punitive damages may also be available where the conduct was especially egregious, discussed below. Funeral and related expenses are recoverable as part of the same action regardless of whether a formal estate has been opened.
Caps on damages
Mississippi does not impose a cap aimed specifically at wrongful death compensatory damages. The state does have a general statutory limit on noneconomic damages that applies to civil actions, with a separate, lower limit for medical malpractice claims. Where one of those caps applies, it limits the noneconomic portion of an award, such as compensation for loss of companionship, rather than economic losses like lost financial support. Whether a cap reaches a given case depends on the nature of the claim, so this is a point to evaluate with counsel. Claims against government entities carry their own separate damage limits.
Punitive damages
Punitive damages can be available in a Mississippi wrongful death case. Because the action recovers all damages of every kind, including the deceased person's own claim, punitive damages may be awarded where the defendant's conduct rose to the level Mississippi law requires, such as actual malice, gross negligence evidencing a willful or reckless disregard for the safety of others, or fraud. Punitive damages are governed by Mississippi's separate punitive damages statute and its own standards and limits, and they are awarded to punish and deter rather than to compensate.

How fault affects recovery
Mississippi follows pure comparative negligence under Section 11-7-15. If the deceased person was partly at fault, the recovery is reduced in proportion to that share of fault, but it is not barred even if the deceased person was mostly at fault. For example, a recovery reduced by the deceased person's percentage of responsibility can still proceed. This is more forgiving than the modified systems used in many states, which cut off recovery once the injured person's fault crosses a threshold.
How the proceeds are distributed
Because one suit is brought for all the statutory beneficiaries, the recovery is shared among the listed family members entitled to it, generally following the classes of relatives the statute and Mississippi descent-and-distribution law recognize. The closest surviving relatives, such as a spouse and children, take ahead of more distant relatives. The court oversees the division so that the proceeds reach the people the statute is meant to protect. Funeral, medical, and related expenses are accounted for as part of the same action.
How to evaluate your situation
A lawsuit cannot replace the person who was lost, but Mississippi law gives the family a single, structured way to seek accountability and compensation. Useful first steps include preserving the death certificate, medical and accident records, and proof of the deceased person's earnings and the family's losses, and identifying who will bring the one permitted action so the filing is coordinated among the beneficiaries. Because the deadline depends on the underlying wrong and government-claim notice periods can be much shorter, speaking with a licensed Mississippi attorney promptly is wise. Most wrongful death attorneys offer a free consultation and work on a contingency basis, meaning no upfront fee and payment only out of any recovery. No outcome can be promised, and this guide is information, not legal advice.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to file a wrongful death claim in Mississippi?
Mississippi borrows the limitations period that fits the underlying wrong. For ordinary negligence that is generally three years from the date of death under Miss. Code 15-1-49, but a different period can apply depending on the type of claim, and claims against a government entity have separate, shorter notice deadlines. Confirm the exact date with an attorney quickly.
Who can file a wrongful death lawsuit in Mississippi?
Under Miss. Code 11-7-13 the action may be brought by the surviving spouse, a child, a parent, or a sibling of the deceased person, or by the personal representative of the estate. The list is exclusive, and only one wrongful death suit is allowed, brought for the benefit of all entitled beneficiaries.
What damages can be recovered in a Mississippi wrongful death case?
Because Mississippi combines wrongful death and survival in one suit, recoverable damages include the present net cash value of the deceased person's life, the loss of companionship and society, the deceased person's pain and suffering before death, and funeral and related expenses. Punitive damages may be available where the conduct was especially egregious.
Is there a cap on wrongful death damages in Mississippi?
There is no cap aimed specifically at wrongful death compensatory damages. Mississippi does have a general statutory cap on noneconomic damages for civil actions, with a separate lower cap for medical malpractice, and whether one applies depends on the nature of the claim. Claims against government entities carry their own separate limits.
Injured in Mississippi? Get a free case review from a personal-injury attorney
If someone else's negligence caused your injury, you may be owed compensation for medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Get a free, no-obligation review from a Mississippi personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- Mississippi Legislature (official Mississippi Code lookup), Miss. Code 11-7-13 (actions for injuries producing death)(legislature.ms.gov).gov
- Mississippi Secretary of State, Mississippi Law (official access to the Mississippi Code of 1972)(sos.ms.gov).gov
- Branton ex rel. Wrongful Death Beneficiaries of Branton v. City of Moss Point (applying Miss. Code 11-7-13), CourtListener(courtlistener.com)
- State of Mississippi Judiciary (Supreme Court and Court of Appeals opinions construing the wrongful death statute)(courts.ms.gov).gov