Skip to content

Taxes In Michigan

2026 Michigan Tax Rates, Collections, and Burdens

How Do Michigan Taxes Compare to Other States?

Michigan has a flat 4.25 percent individual income tax rate. There are also jurisdictions that collect local income taxes. Michigan has a flat 6.00 percent corporate income tax rate, a 6.00 percent state sales tax rate, and an average combined state and local sales tax rate of 6.00 percent. Michigan has a 1.19 percent effective property tax rate on owner-occupied housing value. Michigan does not have an estate tax or inheritance tax. Michigan’s gas tax is 53.4 cents per gallon, and its cigarette excise tax is $2.00 per pack of 20 cigarettes.

Michigan Tax Rankings, Debt, and Tax Revenue

Michigan raises tax revenue primarily through property taxes (33.8 percent of total state and local tax revenue), general sales taxes (23.7 percent), and individual income taxes (22.7 percent). Michigan collects $5,413 in state and local tax collections per capita, carries $7,460 in state and local debt per capita, and has an 82 percent funded ratio of public pension plans. Michigan’s tax system ranks 16th overall on the 2026 State Tax Competitiveness Index.

Understanding Michigan’s Tax System

Each state’s tax code is a multifaceted system with many moving parts, and Michigan is no exception. Use the tabs below to compare Michigan taxes with other states and to see how Michigan raises tax revenue. You can also browse our tax maps, which are compiled from our annual publication, Facts & Figures 2026: How Does Your State Compare?

Stay informed on the tax policies impacting you.

Subscribe to get insights from our trusted experts delivered straight to your inbox.

Subscribe

See Related Articles

Tax Data by State

Get facts about taxes in your state and around the US

Explore Data

How Do Taxes in Michigan Compare?

How Does Michigan Collect Revenue?

How Does Michigan's Tax System Rank?


All Related Articles

sales tax rates by city, cities with highest sales tax rate, city highest sales tax rate, cities with the highest sales tax

Sales Tax Rates in Major Cities, Midyear 2021

Neither Anchorage, Alaska, nor Portland, Oregon, impose any state or local sales taxes. Honolulu, Hawaii, has a low rate of 4.5 percent and several other major cities, including Milwaukee and Madison, Wisconsin, keep overall rates modest.

13 min read
2022 state tax resource center offers leading 2022 state tax resources and 2022 state tax policy resources

Location Matters 2021: The State Tax Costs of Doing Business

A landmark comparison of corporate tax costs in all 50 states, Location Matters provides a comprehensive calculation of real-world tax burdens, going beyond headline rates to demonstrate how tax codes impact businesses and offering policymakers a road map to improvement.

8 min read
State conformity to federal pandemic relief, state tax conformity to federal COVID-19 relief legislation (CARES Act, American Rescue Plan), including Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans and unemployment compensation tax exclusion.

State Conformity to Federal Pandemic-Related Tax Provisions in CARES and ARPA

With so many federal changes occurring in such a short amount of time—including some federal provisions changing more than once and a major change to the treatment of UC income occurring in the middle of tax filing season—state legislators have faced the challenge of responding to these changes quickly in order to provide certainty to taxpayers.

24 min read
State tax burden map, state and local tax burden, state-local tax burden rankings, 2021 state tax burden rankings, state tax burdens map

State and Local Tax Burdens, Calendar Year 2019

New Yorkers faced the highest burden, with 14.1 percent of income in the state going to state and local taxes. Connecticut (12.8 percent) and Hawaii (12.7 percent) followed.

19 min read