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πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules/Rent Control

Rent Control: Detroit vs Livonia

How do rent control rules compare between Detroit, MI and Livonia, MI?

Detroit and Livonia have similar restriction levels.

Detroit, MI

Wayne County

Few Restrictions

Detroit has no rent-control or rent-stabilization ordinance and cannot enact one. Michigan Public Act 226 of 1988, codified at MCL 123.411, preempts the field statewide: a local governmental unit 'shall not enact, maintain, or enforce an ordinance or resolution that would have the effect of controlling the amount of rent charged for leasing private residential property.' The only carve-outs are (1) management and control by a local government of property in which the local government has a property interest, and (2) voluntary incentive programs used to expand the supply of moderate- or low-cost rental housing. Rent inside the City of Detroit is set by private contract between landlord and tenant.

View full Detroit rules β†’

Livonia, MI

Wayne County

Few Restrictions

Michigan law MCL 123.411 preempts all local rent control, so Livonia cannot impose rent caps. Landlords may set and adjust rents freely subject to lease terms and Michigan landlord-tenant law MCL 554.131.

View full Livonia rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactDetroitLivonia
Local Rent Control in DetroitNone permitted-
Preemption StatuteMichigan PA 226 of 1988; MCL 123.411-
Statutory StandardLocal government 'shall not enact, maintain, or enforce' rent-control ordinance-
Carve-Out 1Management/control of property in which the local government has a property interest-
Carve-Out 2Voluntary incentive programs to expand moderate/low-cost rental supply-
Rent-Setting Authority in DetroitPrivate contract between landlord and tenant-
Related Tenant Protections in DetroitRight to Counsel (2022); rental-ordinance escrow and anti-retaliation (2024 Chapter 8, Art. XV amendments)-
State preemption-MCL 123.411
Rent cap-None allowed
Security deposit max-1.5 months rent
Deposit return-30 days
City program-Rental inspection only

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Detroit FAQ

Is there rent control in Detroit?

No. Detroit has no rent-control or rent-stabilization ordinance, and Michigan Public Act 226 of 1988 (MCL 123.411) preempts local governments from enacting one. The statute prohibits a local governmental unit from enacting, maintaining, or enforcing any ordinance or resolution that would have the effect of controlling the amount of rent charged for leasing private residential property, with limited carve-outs for property the local government has an interest in and for voluntary incentive programs.

Could Detroit City Council pass a rent cap if it wanted to?

No, not directly. MCL 123.411 preempts the field statewide. Any general-applicability ordinance from Detroit City Council that caps or limits rent increases on private residential property would be void under Michigan law. Council can, however, use voluntary incentive programs - PILOT agreements, density bonuses, Housing and Revitalization Department covenants - to obtain rent limitations on specific subsidized units in exchange for the incentive.

What protections does a Detroit tenant have if a landlord raises rent dramatically?

Inside the City of Detroit, rent is set by private contract. A fixed-term lease controls the rent for its term, and on expiration the landlord may propose any new rent subject to the notice requirements of MCL 554.134 for at-will or month-to-month tenancies. State and federal anti-discrimination law (Fair Housing Act, Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act, and Detroit's source-of-income provisions in the City Code) prohibit discriminatory rent-setting, but generally applicable rent caps are preempted by MCL 123.411. Tenants facing eviction at the end of the lease term may qualify for Detroit's Right to Counsel program if at or below 200% of the federal poverty level.

Livonia FAQ

Can Livonia pass a rent control ordinance?

No. MCL 123.411 preempts local rent control statewide in Michigan. Any such ordinance would be unenforceable.

Is there any limit on how much a landlord can raise my rent?

Not by ordinance. The only limits are what your current lease states and the notice period required before a new lease or month-to-month change.

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