Mississippi Bankruptcy Exemptions

The Mississippi bankruptcy exemptions chart, see below, details the property you can exempt or protect from creditors when you file bankruptcy in Mississippi. You may exempt any property that falls into one of the exemptions categories below, up to the dollar amount listed. You will be able to kept this exempted property after you file bankruptcy. Please note that there are certain debts which you will not be able to erase in bankruptcy. (see Non-dischargeable Debts)

An exemption limit applies to any equity you have in the property. Equity is the difference between the value of the property and what is owed on the property. For example, a car valued at $5000 with a loan of $4500 has an equity value of only $500.

If the property is secured by a loan, such as a car or home, and you are current on the payments and the equity is covered by your exemptions, you may elect to keep making payments on the loan and keep this property through the bankruptcy. If all the equity is not covered by your exemptions the trustee may elect to liquidate this asset and distribute the proceeds. Generally, in this case, you would be entitled to the value of your exemption in the asset as a cash payment.

Bankruptcy law allows married couples filing jointly to each claim a full set of exemptions, unless otherwise noted.

To keep non-exempt property, a debtor must generally pay the trustee the value of the non-exempt property.

When you file bankruptcy in Mississippi you may also use certain federal exemptions in addition to your Mississippi exemptions.

Homestead

Property occupied by debtor unless over 60 & married or widowed, to $75,000; property cannot exceed 160 acres; sales proceeds exempt

May file homestead declaration

85-3-1(b)(i), 85-3-21,

85-3-23

85-3-27, 85-3-31

Insurance

Disability benefits

Fraternal benefit society benefits

Homeowner’s insurance proceeds to $75,000

Life insurance proceeds if clause prohibits proceeds from being used to pay beneficiary’s creditors

85-3-1(b)(ii)

83-29-39

85-3-25

83-7-5

Miscellaneous

Property of business partnership

79-12-49

Pensions

ERISA-qualified benefits deposited over 1 year before filing

Firefighters

Highway patrol officers

IRAs deposited over 1 year before filing bankruptcy

Keoughs deposited over 1 year before filing bankruptcy

Private retirement benefits to extent tax-deferred

Police officers

Public employees retirement & disability benefits

State employees

Teachers

85-3-1(b)(iii)

21-29-257

25-13-31

85-3-1(b)(iii)

85-3-1(b)(iii)

71-1-43

21-29-257

25-11-129

25-14-5

25-11-201(1)(d)

Personal Property

Tangible personal property of any kind to $10,000

Personal injury judgments to $10,000

Proceeds for exempt property

85-3-1(a)

85-3-17

85-3-(b)(i)

Public benefits

Assistance to aged

Assistance to blind

Assistance to disabled

Crime victims compensation

Social security

Unemployment compensation

Workers’ compensation

43-9-19

43-3-71

43-29-15

99-41-23

25-11-129

71-5-539

71-3-43

Tools of trade

SEE PERSONAL PROPERTY

 

Wages

Earned but unpaid wages owed for 30 days; after 309 days, minimum 75% (bankruptcy judge may authorize more for low income debtors)

85-3-4

WILD CARD

SEE PERSONAL PROPERTY

 

For more information on filing bankruptcy in Mississippi explore Mississippi Bankruptcy Law.