Rent control rules in Farmington Hills, MI β also known as rent stabilization or rent cap ordinances β limit annual rent increases and protect tenants from displacement.
Oakland County has no rent control or rent stabilization. Michigan law (MCL 123.411) explicitly bars every county, city, township, and village in the state from enacting or enforcing any ordinance that controls the amount of rent charged for private residential property. Landlords in Royal Oak, Troy, Farmington Hills, Pontiac, Birmingham, Southfield, and every other Oakland County jurisdiction may set and raise rent at will, subject only to the terms of a written lease and standard contract law. Rent increases on month-to-month tenancies still require a 30-day written notice under MCL 554.134(1).
The Michigan Pre-emption Act, codified at MCL 123.411 (Public Act 226 of 1988), states that 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 statute applies statewide and includes apartments, single-family rentals, condominiums, and mobile homes. The only carve-outs allow a city to manage rent on housing it owns and to operate voluntary affordable-housing incentive programs. Detroit voters approved a rent control ballot measure in August 1988, but the same year the Legislature passed the preemption that nullified it before it could take effect. Multiple repeal bills (House Bill 4947 in 2021 and reintroduced in 2023) have failed in committee. Mid-lease rent increases remain barred by ordinary contract law: a landlord cannot raise rent during a fixed-term lease unless the lease itself contains an escalation clause.
Because there is no rent cap, there is no rent-overcharge complaint process. Tenants disputing an increase have three remedies: (1) negotiate or refuse to renew at the new rate, (2) file a retaliation claim under MCL 600.5720 if the increase followed a code complaint or organizing activity, or (3) raise a fair-housing claim if the increase appears tied to a protected class. Any Oakland County municipality that attempted to pass local rent control would face immediate preemption challenge and the ordinance would be void on its face.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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