Michigan Commercial Rent Increases & The Rent Control Ban

Michigan aggressively protects commercial landlords' pricing power via a statewide ban on rent control. Learn how commercial lease escalations function.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Similar to the residential sector, commercial property owners in Michigan operate in a highly de-regulated, free-market pricing environment. The State of Michigan aggressively protects a commercial landlord's right to maximize their real estate investment.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial real estate in Michigan relies heavily on precise lease drafting regarding rent reviews. Always consult a licensed commercial property attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

The Statewide Ban on Rent Control

Michigan landlords—whether operating a massive industrial park in Grand Rapids or a multi-tenant office building in downtown Detroit—cannot be subjected to local government rent caps.

Under the Rent Control Preemption Act of 1988 (MCL 123.411), the state legislature explicitly prohibits all local municipalities from enacting any law, ordinance, or resolution that limits the amount of rent a landlord can charge for private property.

Because of this statutory preemption, the only limit on how much a commercial landlord can charge is what the open market is willing to pay.

Structuring the Rent Increases (Escalation Clauses)

Because the law does not cap increases, a commercial landlord's ability to raise rent during a multi-year term depends entirely on how effectively they drafted the lease agreement. Most Michigan commercial leases span 3, 5, or 10 years, making annual rent increases (escalations) critical to combatting inflation and preserving the building's capitalization rate.

If a 5-year commercial lease is completely silent regarding rent increases, the rent remains entirely flat for the full 60 months.

To ensure profitability, Michigan landlords typically employ one of three escalation methodologies:

1. Fixed Percentage Increases (Stepped Rent)

This is the most common and predictable method. The lease explicitly dictates that the Base Rent will increase by a fixed, predetermined percentage (usually 3% to 5%) on the anniversary date of the lease each year.

  • Advantage: Simple to calculate and administer; predictable revenue forecasting for the institutional landlord.

2. CPI Escalations (Inflation-Tied)

The lease states that the rent will increase annually based on the published Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the specific geographic area (e.g., the Detroit-Warren-Dearborn CPI).

  • Advantage: Directly protects the landlord from runaway inflation.
  • Disadvantage: If the economy enters a true deflationary period, the rent physically couldn't increase (unless the landlord drafted a protective "floor" or "ratchet" clause into the lease).

3. Fair Market Value (FMV) Reviews

This mechanism is typically reserved for lease "Renewal Options" (e.g., at the end of a 5-year lease, the tenant exercises an option to renew for another 5 years). Rather than guessing what the market will look like half a decade in advance, the clause states the new rent will be reset to the "Current Fair Market Value" as determined by independent commercial appraisers.

Ratchet Clauses

In Michigan, commercial landlords can aggressively draft "Ratchet Clauses" protecting their portfolio downside. A ratchet clause attached to an FMV review dictates that regardless of the determination of the independent real estate appraiser, the new rent can never be lower than the rent the tenant paid in the preceding year of the lease.

Managing Escalation Calculations the Right Way

A missing 4% compound rent increase across a 50,000 square foot industrial park over three years can cost a syndicator hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost Net Operating Income. Landager centralizes these disparate escalation formulas natively into the platform. Whether a specific Detroit tenant requires a flat 3% bump every June or a complex CPI-tied adjustment with an enforced 2% floor, the software automatically triggers the correct mathematical hike and generates the updated rent invoices flawlessly.

Back to Michigan Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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