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Fuel Delivery in Mississippi

We're not in Mississippi yet — drop your email and we'll tell you the moment local dealers join.

Mississippi runs from the Tennessee hills and Tupelo down through the Delta and the Pine Belt to the Gulf Coast; outside Jackson and the larger cities, propane covers a substantial share of rural heating, cooking, and water heating. Across the Deep South, propane plays a meaningful role in Mississippi, carrying whole-home heat, hot water, cooking, and standby power for households the natural-gas grid never reached.

How Mississippi heats its homes

American Community Survey 2022 5-year estimates, rounded for narrative use:

  • Natural gas: ≈22% of housing units
  • Heating oil and kerosene: <1% of housing units
  • Propane (LP-Gas): ≈8% of housing units
  • Electricity: ≈65% of housing units
  • Wood, solar, and other / no fuel: ≈5% of housing units

Electric heat carries most of the state, but propane is a workhorse for cooking, water heating, pool heat, and standby generators in homes where electricity isn’t enough on the coldest days.

Heating climate in Mississippi

Mississippi averages about 2,700 heating degree days per year — a short, mild heating season. Heating demand drives the propane delivery cycle from the first hard frost through the last spring cold snap, with usage swinging sharply between mild and severe winters.

Nearby states

Mississippi shares a land border with Louisiana, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Alabama. Once dealers join from any of these states we’ll surface them here so you can compare delivery options across the regional market.

Propane installations are governed by NFPA 58, the Liquefied Petroleum Gas Code — the consensus standard for storage, transfer, dispensing, and use of LP-Gas. NFPA 58 is widely adopted by reference into state and local fire codes, and state and local Authorities Having Jurisdiction (the AHJ) — typically the state fire marshal’s office, local fire departments, and building/permitting offices — enforce setback distances, tank-placement clearances, installer-licensing requirements, and any state-specific overlay on top of NFPA 58. Always confirm permitting and inspection requirements with a licensed installer and your local AHJ before any tank install, modification, or fuel switch.

This code shall apply to the storage, handling, transportation, and use of liquefied petroleum gas (LP-Gas).

NFPA 58, §1.1.1 (Liquefied Petroleum Gas Code, 2024 ed.). View source

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