The Commercial Eviction Process in Michigan

Understand the commercial eviction process in Michigan under the Summary Proceedings Act, including the 7-day notice to quit and why self-help is illegal.

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.

Unlike commercial real estate in some Southern US states, Michigan flatly prohibits commercial landlords from utilizing "self-help" evictions. This means you cannot simply change the locks on a tenant's warehouse on a Friday evening because they are three months behind on rent, even if your lease claims you have the right to do so.

A commercial landlord looking to regain possession of their property must utilize the formal legal process outlined in the Michigan Summary Proceedings Act.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial evictions involve complex corporate structures and bankruptcy risks. Always consult a licensed commercial real estate attorney in Michigan. Information last verified: March 2026.

The Notice to Quit (The Demand for Possession)

The first step in any commercial eviction is properly serving the tenant with a statutory written notice. Because Michigan courts favor resolving disputes before litigation, serving an invalid notice will result in the judge dismissing the eviction lawsuit entirely.

Like residential evictions, the timeframe depends on the breach:

1. Eviction for Nonpayment of Rent

If the tenant defaults on their rent obligations (Base Rent or designated NNN Outgoings), the landlord must serve a formal 7-Day Demand for Possession for Nonpayment of Rent.

  • The business has precisely seven (7) days to pay the entire amount owed or vacate the premises.
  • If the tenant pays in full, the eviction is halted. Partial payments can sometimes restart the clock depending on how the lease addresses acceptance of partial rent.

2. Eviction for Lease Violations (Non-Monetary Breach)

If the tenant violates a specific lease clause—such as illegally storing hazardous chemicals, executing an unapproved sublease, or failing to maintain the HVAC system—the landlord typically must serve a 30-Day Notice to Quit to Recover Possession of Property.

  • The tenant has 30 days to "cure" (fix) the breach.
  • NOTE: Highly aggressive, custom-drafted commercial leases can sometimes attempt to contractually shorten this 30-day non-monetary cure period down to 7 or 14 days, though enforcement relies entirely on the precise wording of the lease and the judge's discretion.

Filing the Summary Proceedings Lawsuit

If the notice period expires (7 days for rent, typically 30 days for violations) and the commercial tenant remains in the property, the landlord must file a Summons and Complaint with the local Michigan District Court in the county where the building is located.

The court will set a hearing date. Because commercial rent defaults often involve massive sums of money (frequently exceeding the $25,000 threshold of the District Court's jurisdiction), landlords often file a separate, parallel breach-of-contract lawsuit in the Circuit Court to chase the actual monetary damages, while using the District Court solely to regain physical possession of the building.

The Judgment and Writ of Restitution

If the landlord wins the possession hearing, the judge issues a Judgment of Possession. Crucially, under MCL 600.5744, the judge must grant the commercial tenant a 10-day statutory grace period after the judgment to pay the outstanding balance or move out.

If the tenant ignores the judgment and stays past the 10 days, the landlord must pay for a Writ of Restitution. This legally authorizes a court-appointed bailiff or sheriff's deputy to physically execute the eviction, removing the commercial tenant's inventory, machinery, and personnel, and returning full possession to the landlord.

The Danger of Constructive Eviction

If a landlord attempts to pressure a commercial tenant into leaving by shutting off essential utilities (e.g., electricity, water) or barricading the parking lot before a court has issued a Writ of Restitution, the tenant can sue the landlord for Constructive Eviction. Under Michigan law, a landlord found guilty of a 'self-help' lock-out can be sued for three times the amount of actual damages the business suffered, plus attorney's fees.

Clean Ledgers Win Evictions

Commercial eviction cases in Michigan are frequently derailed when the tenant's corporate attorney challenges the landlord's arithmetic regarding compounding 12% default interest and miscalculated NNN common area maintenance charges. Landager provides institutional-grade ledger tracking for your commercial portfolio. By cleanly separating Base Rent from operating expense reimbursements and default interest, you generate impeccable 7-Day Demand notices that withstand aggressive cross-examination in District Court.

Back to Michigan Commercial Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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