AudioRecordingLaw
U.S. audio recording & filming rules by state

Audio recording consent (one-party vs all-party) — Mississippi

Not legal advice. General information only; laws change and outcomes depend on facts.

Quick answer: Audio recording rules vary by state. In this state, check the RCFP guide linked below for the current consent standard and key exceptions.

Consent standardVaries by state (verify)
If you are a participantRecording is typically allowed (subject to exceptions).
If you are NOT a participantRisk increases significantly; may be unlawful to intercept/record.
Cross‑state callsOther states’ laws may apply depending on where parties are located.
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Plain‑language explanation

Some states allow participant recording with the consent of one party; others require consent from all parties for certain types of communications.

If you’re not part of the conversation, secretly recording or intercepting it is where criminal and civil exposure tends to arise.

Why this matters for “filming in public”

Video in public is often fine, but adding clear audio of a private conversation can change the analysis.

When you can, separate “video only” from “video + audio,” and default to caution with audio.

Related

Sources