On April 1, 2026, the Mississippi Legislature sent House Bill 1662 to Governor Tate Reeves, establishing a rebuttable presumption of equal 50-50 parenting time in contested divorce custody cases. If signed, the law takes effect July 1, 2026, applying to new divorces and initial custody determinations, with documented domestic violence as a statutory carve-out under the bill's exceptions clause.
Key Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| What happened | Mississippi Legislature passed HB 1662 creating a rebuttable 50-50 joint custody presumption |
| When | Sent to Governor Reeves on April 1, 2026; effective date July 1, 2026 if signed |
| Where | Mississippi chancery courts (82 counties, 20 chancery districts) |
| Who is affected | Parents filing for divorce or initial custody determinations after July 1, 2026 |
| Key statute affected | Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-24 (child custody determinations) |
| Impact | Shifts burden of proof: parents opposing equal time must rebut the presumption with evidence |
Source: Mississippi Today, April 1, 2026
Why This Matters Legally
HB 1662 fundamentally changes how Mississippi chancery judges approach custody disputes. Under current law, judges apply the 12-factor Albright v. Albright, 437 So. 2d 1003 (Miss. 1983) analysis without any starting presumption — each parent begins on equal footing, and the court weighs factors like parenting skills, stability, and the child's preference. HB 1662 inserts a thumb on the scale: judges must start from 50-50 and only deviate when a parent presents sufficient evidence to rebut that presumption.
This is a procedural revolution, not just a policy preference. Rebuttable presumptions shift the burden of production in Mississippi civil proceedings. A parent who wants primary physical custody under HB 1662 must now affirmatively prove that equal time would not serve the child's best interests. That burden did not exist before. Chancellors retain discretion to deviate, but they must articulate on the record why the presumption was overcome — creating appellate review points that currently do not exist under the pure Albright framework.
How Mississippi Law Handles Custody Today
Mississippi custody law currently operates without any parenting-time presumption. Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-24 authorizes chancery courts to award joint legal custody, joint physical custody, sole legal custody, or sole physical custody based on the child's best interests. The controlling standard comes from Albright, which requires chancellors to evaluate 12 factors including the age and health of the child, continuity of care, parenting skills, employment responsibilities, physical and mental health of parents, emotional ties, moral fitness, home environment, stability, and the child's preference if age 12 or older.
Under Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-23, chancery courts have broad equitable discretion to shape custody orders, and appellate reversal requires a finding that the chancellor was manifestly wrong or applied an erroneous legal standard. Practically, this means most contested Mississippi divorces produce primary-custody-plus-standard-visitation outcomes — typically every other weekend, alternating holidays, and extended summer time. True 50-50 splits are uncommon absent parental agreement. HB 1662 would invert that default for cases filed on or after July 1, 2026.
Practical Takeaways for Mississippi Parents
- If you are contemplating divorce and want primary custody, filing before July 1, 2026 keeps your case under the pure Albright framework without the 50-50 starting point.
- If you want equal parenting time and cannot reach agreement, waiting to file until after July 1, 2026 may benefit you procedurally — the presumption will favor your position.
- Document everything now: school pickups, medical appointments, extracurricular involvement, and caregiving history. Under HB 1662, rebuttal evidence will drive outcomes.
- Domestic violence survivors should preserve police reports, protective orders, medical records, and photographs. The bill's carve-out requires documented evidence, not allegations.
- Existing custody orders entered before July 1, 2026 are not automatically affected. Modifications still require a material change in circumstances under Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-24.
- Consult a Mississippi family law attorney about timing strategy before filing — the difference between a March 2026 and July 2026 filing could determine your custody outcome.
What Happens Next
Governor Tate Reeves has not committed to signing or vetoing HB 1662 as of April 1, 2026, according to Mississippi Today. Under Mississippi Constitution Article 4, Section 72, the governor has 5 days to act on legislation during session or 15 days after adjournment. If Reeves signs, the law takes effect July 1, 2026. If he vetoes, the Legislature can override with a two-thirds vote in both chambers. If he takes no action within the constitutional window, the bill becomes law without his signature.
This article discusses recent news and provides general legal commentary. It does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Consult a qualified family law attorney for advice specific to your situation.