Mississippi teachers still earn less than other educators across the South, and the state’s lieutenant governor hopes to change that with a pay raise this year.
During a Jan. 5 Stennis-Capitol Press Forum at Hal and Mal’s in Jackson, Lt. Gov. Hosemann said he wants to raise salaries for K-12, community college and university educators.
“We have to make that competitive in order to have people to teach our young people on how to go forward,” he said on Jan. 5.
The lieutenant governor did not share any amounts or other specifics on the pay raises he is proposing.
Mississippi should continue its “education momentum” by bringing retired teachers back to schools and improving the state’s K-12 education ranking to reach the top 10, he added. Last year, the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s annual KIDS COUNT Data Book found that Mississippi ranked No. 16 in the nation for education in 2024, up from No. 48 in 2014.
The Legislature has raised teacher pay in recent years. Most teachers and teachers’ assistants got a $1,000 pay raise after Gov. Tate Reeves signed a pay raise into law in 2021. The legislation also raised the salary for new teachers by $1,100. The next year, he signed into law a $5,140 per teacher pay raise.
After the initial raise under the 2022 law, teachers receive several hundred dollars extra on their salaries most years, with additional raises at five and 25 years of employment. Mississippi’s starting salary for teachers was $41,500 in 2025, still significantly below the national average of $46,500.
The new legislative session began at noon on Tuesday.
