| Right-to-disconnect law | No statewide law |
| Electronic monitoring disclosure | Federal floor only |
| Expense reimbursement mandatory | Permissive (FLSA floor) |
| State personal income tax | Yes (4.7% top rate) |
Mississippi has no right-to-disconnect statute and minimal remote-work-specific regulation.
Miss. Code Ann. § 41-29-531 makes Mississippi a one-party consent state for recording communications. Employers can record calls in which any one participant consents. No state statute requires written notice for general electronic or email monitoring.
Mississippi has no statute requiring employer reimbursement of remote-work expenses. The FLSA floor (no kickback below minimum wage) applies.
Mississippi follows federal AGI and does not separately allow the TCJA-suspended unreimbursed-employee-business-expense deduction for W-2 workers. Accountable-plan reimbursements remain tax-free at both federal and state level.
Mississippi is on a phased rate reduction; the 2026 top rate is 4.7% on income over $10,000, and the rate steps down further under HB 1 (2022 session) and follow-on legislation.
At-will employment: Mississippi is one of the strongest at-will employment states in the country, with a narrow public-policy exception recognized in McArn v. Allied Bruce-Terminix.
Mississippi remote-work activity concentrates in Jackson and adjacent metros, with Sanderson Farms, C Spire, Trustmark among the larger remote-friendly headquarters. State-level BLS Telework Supplement micro-data was not retrievable at verification time; the national figure (~19-23% any-telework) is the closest available baseline.
Top remote-hub metro: Jackson
Notable remote-work employers headquartered in Mississippi:
Our sister site CeoCult covers the federal + Mississippi home-office tax deduction methodology in detail, including IRS Form 8829, the simplified $5/sq ft method, and the state-specific quirks for Mississippi filers.
Read the Mississippi home-office deduction guide on CeoCult →
No. Mississippi has no reimbursement statute. The only floor is the federal FLSA rule that unreimbursed business expenses cannot push effective wages below the minimum wage.
On employer equipment and accounts, generally yes. Mississippi has no electronic-monitoring notice statute. Voice calls are one-party consent.
Flat stipends are taxable wages at both the federal and Mississippi levels. Accountable-plan reimbursements are excluded from gross income and therefore from Mississippi taxable income.
No. Any limit on after-hours work contact is a matter of employer policy, not Mississippi law.