Michigan Property Tax Calculator
Calculate property taxes in Michigan. MI effective property tax rate is 1.38% with a median home value of $230,000. Includes MI assessment ratios and exemptions.
Michigan at a Glance
$230,000
Median Home Price
1.38%
Property Tax Rate
$1,400
Avg Home Insurance
$472,030
FHA Loan Limit
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Reviewed & Methodology
Every calculator is built using industry-standard formulas, validated against authoritative sources, and reviewed by a credentialed financial professional. State-specific data is sourced from official government publications.
Property Tax Calculator in Michigan
The median home price in Michigan is $230,000, which is 45% below the national average of $420,000. Michigan's effective property tax rate of 1.38% is 0.28 percentage points higher than the national average of 1.1%.
| Metric | Michigan (MI) | National Avg | vs National Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $230,000 | $420,000 | -45% |
| Property Tax Rate | 1.38% | 1.1% | +0.28% |
| Home Insurance (Annual) | $1,400 | $2,300 | -39% |
| State Sales Tax | 6% | 5% | +1.0% |
| FHA Loan Limit | $472,030 | $472,030 | Standard |
| Conforming Loan Limit | $766,550 | $766,550 | Standard |
Homeownership in Michigan
Michigan's housing market has two faces: Detroit and its suburbs have undergone a dramatic recovery from post-2008 lows, with prices rising steadily but remaining affordable relative to national norms. West Michigan cities like Grand Rapids have become tight markets with limited inventory. The statewide median around $230,000 masks wide variation, and the state's unique Proposal A (1994) assessment system limits the growth of taxable value -- but only for existing owners, not new buyers who pay taxes based on full purchase price.
Tips for Michigan Homebuyers and Homeowners
- Michigan's Proposal A caps annual increases in taxable value at the rate of inflation or 5%, whichever is lower -- but when a home is sold, the taxable value 'uncaps' to match the current state-equalized value, meaning you inherit a full reassessment in your purchase year.
- Michigan assesses property at 50% of market value (State Equalized Value), so your tax is based on half the purchase price -- but with the uncapping issue, new buyers often see a significant first-year tax increase.
- The Principal Residence Exemption removes the 18-mill school operating levy from the property tax bill for owner-occupants, saving roughly $1,800 per year on a $200,000 home -- file within 90 days of purchase.
- Michigan eliminated its personal property tax on homeowners in recent reforms; the burden now falls primarily on commercial equipment, which reduced the commercial tax base and shifted some cost to residential rates.
Michigan Programs and Assistance
- Michigan State Housing Development Authority (MSHDA) MI Home Loan -- down payment assistance of up to $10,000 for qualifying first-time buyers, with income and purchase price limits.
- MSHDA MI Home Loan Flex -- broader eligibility version allowing repeat buyers in certain targeted areas, also with $10,000 DPA available.
- Step Forward Michigan (Michigan Homeowner Assistance Fund) -- provided mortgage assistance to homeowners facing pandemic-related hardship; check current availability as programs evolved post-2022.
Did you know? Michigan's Proposal A assessment system means that two identical neighbors with different purchase years can have property tax bills that differ by 50% or more -- a 30-year resident and a new buyer can pay wildly different amounts on equivalent homes.