Key Takeaways

  • Brokers must maintain a trust account (escrow account) at a federally-insured Mississippi financial institution
  • All client funds (earnest money, security deposits, rent) must be deposited into the trust account
  • Commingling broker funds with client funds is prohibited (except for minimal amount to maintain account)
  • Trust account records must be maintained for at least 3 years
  • MREC has authority to audit trust accounts at any time
Last updated: January 2026

Mississippi Trust Account Requirements

Mississippi brokers must maintain trust accounts to hold client funds separate from their operating funds.

Trust Account Basics

What is a Trust Account?

A trust account (also called an escrow account) is a bank account where brokers hold funds belonging to others:

Fund TypeExamples
Earnest money depositsBuyer's good faith deposit
Security depositsTenant deposits on rentals
Rent collectionsCollected on behalf of landlords
Other client fundsClosing proceeds pending disbursement

Where to Open

Trust accounts must be at:

  • A federally-insured financial institution
  • Located in Mississippi
  • In the broker's name (or brokerage name)
  • Designated as a trust or escrow account

Key Requirement: The account must be clearly identified as a trust account, not a personal or operating account.

Deposit Requirements

Timeline

SituationDeposit Deadline
Earnest moneyPer contract terms (typically within 2-3 business days of acceptance)
Security depositsPer lease agreement
RentPer management agreement

Proper Deposits

All client funds must be deposited into the broker's trust account—not:

  • Salesperson's personal account
  • Broker's operating account
  • Any other non-trust account

Critical Rule: Salespersons cannot hold client funds. Only brokers maintain trust accounts.

Prohibited Practices

Commingling

Commingling is mixing client funds with broker's personal or business funds. It is strictly prohibited.

AllowedNOT Allowed
Client funds in trust accountClient funds in operating account
Small broker deposit to maintain account (typically $100-500)Large broker funds in trust account
Interest earned (per agreement)Using client funds for business expenses

Conversion

Conversion is using client funds for unauthorized purposes. It is a serious violation that can result in:

  • License revocation
  • Criminal charges
  • Civil liability
  • Payment from Recovery Fund

Record Keeping

Required Records

Brokers must maintain:

RecordDescription
Bank statementsMonthly statements from financial institution
Deposit receiptsDocumentation of each deposit
Check recordsDocumentation of each disbursement
Client ledgersIndividual records for each client/transaction
ReconciliationMonthly reconciliation of all accounts

Retention Period

RequirementDuration
Trust account records3 years minimum
Transaction files3 years minimum
Reconciliations3 years minimum

MREC Audits

MREC has authority to:

  • Audit trust accounts at any time without notice
  • Review records during investigations
  • Take disciplinary action for violations

Common Audit Findings

IssueConsequence
Shortage of fundsSerious violation—potential revocation
Poor record keepingWarning to suspension
Late depositsWarning to fine
ComminglingFine to revocation
Missing reconciliationsWarning to fine
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Trust Account Fund Flow
Test Your Knowledge

Who is authorized to maintain a trust account for client funds in Mississippi?

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Test Your Knowledge

How long must Mississippi brokers maintain trust account records?

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Test Your Knowledge

What is "commingling" in real estate?

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