Required Disclosures for Michigan Residential Landlords
Understand the mandatory information, including the Truth in Renting Act clause and the 14-day security deposit notice, that landlords must provide in Michigan.
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.
Michigan legislation places a heavy disclosure burden on landlords to ensure tenants are fully aware of their statutory rights. Chief among these requirements is strict compliance with the Truth in Renting Act.
Failure to provide these mandatory disclosures precisely as the law dictates can render entire sections of a lease legally void or open the landlord up to lawsuits for statutory damages.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed Michigan attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
1. Truth in Renting Act Disclosure
The most critical disclosure in Michigan is the Truth In Renting Act Notice. Every written residential lease agreement must contain a specific, statutorily mandated 3-sentence statement.
The lease must state—in a prominent place and rendered in at least 12-point type, or in legible print with letters not smaller than 1/8 inch:
"NOTICE: Michigan law establishes rights and obligations for parties to rental agreements. This agreement is required to comply with the Truth in Renting Act. If you have a question about the interpretation or legality of a provision of this agreement, you may want to seek assistance from a lawyer or other qualified person."
If your lease lacks this exact phrasing, it essentially violates Michigan law on its face.
2. Security Deposit Location Notice
When a landlord collects a security deposit (which is capped at 1.5 months' rent), they cannot simply stay quiet about where the money is being held.
Under the Landlord and Tenant Relationships Act (Act 348 of 1972), the landlord must provide the tenant with written notification of the name and address of the financial institution holding the funds, or the name of the surety company issuing the bond.
- This written notice must be provided within 14 days of the tenant taking possession of the property.
- The notice must also instruct the tenant to provide their forwarding address to the landlord within 4 days of moving out.
3. The Inventory Checklist (Condition Report)
Landlords cannot collect a security deposit without providing an Inventory Checklist at move-in. The landlord must provide the tenant with two blank copies of this checklist, covering all rooms and appliances in the unit.
- The landlord must include a conspicuous written notice on the first page of the checklist instructing the tenant that they must review the property, note any existing damages, and return one signed copy of the checklist to the landlord within 7 days.
4. Domestic Violence Rights Disclosure
Under MCL 554.601b, Michigan law allows victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking to break their lease early without financial penalty if they are in reasonable apprehension of present danger.
To ensure tenants know this right exists, the landlord must either include a specific clause in the lease agreement OR explicitly provide a separate written addendum disclosing the tenant's exact statutory rights to seek an early release from the rental agreement under these emergency circumstances.
5. Standard Federal Disclosures (Lead-Based Paint)
If the rental property was built before 1978, the landlord must comply with federal law and provide the tenant with:
- An EPA-approved information pamphlet on identifying and controlling lead-based paint hazards.
- Any known information or reports concerning lead-based paint in the building.
- A Lead Warning Statement attached to the lease, which must be signed by both parties.
Perfecting Michigan Leasing Workflows
Missing the 12-point font requirement on the Truth in Renting Act disclosure, or forgetting to physically hand the tenant the 14-day security deposit notice, immediately jeopardizes a Michigan landlord's legal standing. Landager handles these complex statutory requirements dynamically. The platform natively injects the exact 12-point required phrasing into your digital leases and automatically generates and emails the 14-day Escrow Bank notifications to your tenants, removing manual administrative risk.
Sources & Official References
Jeste li spremni pojednostaviti svoj posao iznajmljivanja?
Pridružite se tisućama nezavisnih iznajmljivača koji su pojednostavili svoje poslovanje s Landagerom.
