With about 2.94M people and a 19.4% poverty rate, Mississippi sits meaningfully above the 11.5% national baseline, which lifts month-to-month demand for short-term credit. Median household income runs $52,985; against that, a single high-cost loan can swallow most of a paycheck.

Whether a Mississippi borrower ends up in a debt trap usually comes down to three things: the Mississippi Department of Banking and Consumer Finance, which issues licences and investigates complaints; the on-the-ground safety net of credit unions, employer-EWA programs and nonprofits such as Mississippi Credit Union Association, Mississippi Center for Justice and United Way of the Capital Area; and the statutory ceiling — Miss. Code Ann. Sec. 75-67-501 (Check Cashers Act; Credit Availability Act for installment) — on what any licensed lender may charge. Large Mississippi payrolls — Nissan North America, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Ingalls Shipbuilding, Mississippi State University and Sanderson Farms — increasingly route financial-wellness benefits through EWA platforms and credit-union partnerships.

At $52,985, Mississippi’s median household income trails the national figure — which leaves thinner cushion for an unexpected bill. Demand for short-term credit is not spread evenly: it peaks in Jackson and tapers in smaller markets, while Mississippi Credit Union Association members anchor the lower-cost end of the lending picture.

A lot of Mississippi paychecks come from Nissan North America, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Ingalls Shipbuilding and Mississippi State University and other large employers. That matters because scale brings benefits: EWA platforms and credit-union partnerships tend to follow the biggest payrolls.

Payday-loan demand in Mississippi concentrates in Jackson, Gulfport, Southaven and Hattiesburg. Jackson carries the largest single share of monthly search volume; each metro has its own credit-union footprint and employer mix.

Under Miss. Code Ann. Sec. 75-67-501 (Check Cashers Act; Credit Availability Act for installment), Mississippi borrowers are protected by the $500 principal ceiling, the federal Military Lending Act 36% Military APR cap for covered service members, database-enforced limits on how many loans you can stack, the 521% APR statutory rate cap, a flat prohibition on rollovers and the 30-day term cap. The Mississippi Department of Banking and Consumer Finance accepts resident complaints, most of which resolve within 30–60 days.

Mississippi has one of the highest concentrations of payday storefronts per capita in the country and permits loans up to $500 with no rollover.

Search demand in Mississippi fans out from Jackson through Gulfport, Southaven, Hattiesburg and Biloxi and into smaller markets like Olive Branch, Tupelo and Meridian. A PAL within reach depends on which Mississippi Credit Union Association member serves your ZIP — our city pages map that out.

Tip: Get every number in writing first: a Mississippi lender must hand you a TILA disclosure showing the finance charge, APR and total of payments. If they won't, walk away.

Real-dollar cost in Mississippi

Mississippi caps the fee at $20 per $100 borrowed for loans under $250, and $21.95 per $100 for loans $251–$500. Translated into money, the 521% APR ceiling looks like this across typical Mississippi loan sizes. A preferred rate, an existing account, or a clean borrowing history can each push the fee down.

Loan amountTermTypical feeTotal costAPR
$10030 days$42.82$142.82521%
$30030 days$128.47$428.47521%
$50030 days$214.11$714.11521%

Note: these figures reflect the statutory cap. Some Mississippi lenders charge less; any lender charging more would be unenforceable. Get the fee schedule in writing before you sign.

Top Mississippi cities

Mississippi's top metros differ more than the statewide rules suggest — different employers, different ZIP-level access, different credit-union networks. Pick a city for the local detail.

Mississippi alternatives (almost always cheaper)

For most Mississippi borrowers, at least one option below beats a payday loan on cost — often by 80–95%. Compare before you apply.

Earned Wage Access (EWA) — popular with Mississippi employers

DailyPay, EarnIn, Brigit and Payactiv let you draw pay you have already earned. Large Mississippi employers such as Nissan North America and University of Mississippi Medical Center integrate at least one. No interest, optional tip, usually same-day.

Employer-linked$0 APR

Mississippi legal aid + bar referral

If a lender broke Mississippi law — wrong rate, harassment, ACH abuse, threats of prosecution — the Mississippi Bar lawyer-referral service can connect you to a consumer-rights attorney. First consultations are often free.

Legal aidFree intro

Mississippi LIHEAP energy assistance

Mississippi LIHEAP grants offset heating and cooling bills for households near 150% of the poverty line. Apply through your county intake office — shutoff cases are fast-tracked ahead of the usual 2–4 week window.

Federal/stateUp to $1,000+

Salvation Army of Mississippi emergency aid

Salvation Army corps centers across Mississippi give one-time emergency help for rent, utilities, food and prescriptions. After an intake interview, Jackson and other regional centers often process applications same-day.

Nonprofit$0 cost

Bank small-dollar programs (Mississippi checking customers)

If you already bank with a major institution in Mississippi, ask about its small-dollar product — Balance Assist, Simple Loan, Flex Loan or QuickLoan. At roughly 100–200% APR they are far below storefront payday and judged on deposit history.

Existing-customer only~100–200% APR

Mississippi-specific FAQ

What if I can't repay my Mississippi payday loan on the due date?

Don't let it default silently. Mississippi forbids rollovers, but the better move is to request an Extended Payment Plan from the lender — usually available once a year at no extra cost.

Are there cooling-off rules between Mississippi loans?

There is no mandated waiting period in Mississippi. What limits back-to-back borrowing is the aggregate cap and the database licensed lenders must check before approving you.

Where do I file a complaint about a Mississippi payday lender?

The Mississippi Department of Banking and Consumer Finance takes complaints from Mississippi residents — online or by mail, no attorney needed. It investigates licensing breaches, deceptive practices and FDCPA collection abuse. You can also file with the federal CFPB at consumerfinance.gov/complaint.

Do Mississippi payday lenders pull a credit report?

Most Mississippi lenders run a soft inquiry through an alternative bureau and check the state database; a hard FICO/VantageScore pull is uncommon for payday loans because the score is a poor predictor of two-week repayment.

Can I have more than one payday loan at a time in Mississippi?

In practice, most Mississippi borrowers are held to one or two outstanding loans. Mississippi has one of the highest concentrations of payday storefronts per capita in the country and permits loans up to $500 with no rollover. The state database catches stacking even when an individual lender doesn't.

Mississippi state disclosure: Under Miss. Code Ann. Sec. 75-67-501 (Check Cashers Act; Credit Availability Act for installment), Mississippi lenders are licensed and supervised by the Mississippi Department of Banking and Consumer Finance. The required TILA disclosure must show finance charge, APR and total of payments; an annual Extended Payment Plan is available on request at no extra charge. Complaints: dbcf.ms.gov ↗. See also 15 alternatives ranked by APR and the main payday-loans guide.