Michigan Rent Increase Laws: The Ban on Rent Control

A comprehensive guide to Michigan's rent increase rules, explaining the statewide ban on rent control ordinances and the 30-day notice period.

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 landlords operating on the coasts, Michigan property owners act in an incredibly free-market regulatory environment regarding rent pricing.

The State of Michigan actively protects landlords from local municipalities attempting to cap their rental income.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

The Statewide Ban on Rent Control

In Michigan, there is no limit on how much a landlord can increase the rent.

Under the Rent Control Preemption Act of 1988 (MCL 123.411), the state legislature explicitly prohibited local governments from enacting, maintaining, or enforcing any law or ordinance that dictates the amount of rent a landlord can charge for private residential property.

This means a city council in Detroit, Ann Arbor, or Grand Rapids cannot legally pass local "Rental Caps" or restrict a landlord from raising a $1,000/month apartment to $2,000/month at the end of a lease term, regardless of the housing market conditions.

When Can Rent Be Increased?

While landlords have full discretion over the amount of the increase, their ability to implement it depends entirely on the structure of the lease.

Active Fixed-Term Leases

You cannot randomly increase the rent during an active fixed-term lease (e.g., midway through a 12-month lease) unless the drafted lease agreement explicitly contains an escalation clause allowing for it. Such clauses are extremely rare in standard residential leases but common in commercial ones. In almost all residential scenarios, the rent is locked in for the duration of the fixed term.

Month-to-Month (Periodic) Leases

If the lease has transitioned to a month-to-month arrangement, or there is no written lease, the landlord has the legal right to increase the rent.

The 30-Day Notice Period

While there is no cap on the dollar amount, landlords must provide proper statutory notice before an increase takes effect.

For month-to-month tenancies, the landlord must provide 30 days' advance written notice (equivalent to one full rental period) before the new, increased rent takes effect.

  • The written notice must clearly state the new rent amount and the exact date it will begin.
  • If the tenant receives the notice of a 50% rent hike and refuses to accept it, they have the right to serve their own 30-day notice to terminate the tenancy and move out before the higher rent actually kicks in.

Retaliatory Rent Increases

The only legal restriction on rent increases in Michigan is when the increase is deemed "Retaliatory."

Under MCL 600.5720, a landlord cannot drastically raise the rent solely as retaliation against a tenant who has:

  1. Attempted to secure or enforce rights under the lease or laws of the State of Michigan.
  2. Complained to a government authority about health or safety code violations at the property.
  3. Joined or organized a formal tenant's union.

If a tenant reports a severe mold issue to the city health inspector, and the landlord responds the very next day by issuing a 60% rent increase notice, a Michigan judge is highly likely to strike the increase down as illegal retaliation and potentially fine the landlord.

Managing Lease Renewals Effortlessly

Tracking 12-month lease expiration dates manually leaves money on the table. Landager provides Michigan property owners with perfectly automated lease renewal workflows. Set your desired market escalation, and the platform will automatically generate and dispatch legally pristine 30-day or 60-day renewal offers to your tenants ahead of expiration, ensuring your portfolio's cash flow keeps pace with market inflation without dropping the ball on state notice laws.

Back to Michigan Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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