Michigan state income tax: Flat tax. Top rate: 4.25%.
Published May 6, 2026
## Michigan state income tax overview
Every U.S. resident pays federal income tax — but state-level tax varies dramatically. Michigan's tax structure is summarized below.
### Michigan's framework
- **Structure:** Flat tax
- **Top rate:** 4.25%
## Three tax structures explained
**Graduated (progressive) income tax.** Multiple brackets. Higher income = higher marginal rate on the income above each bracket threshold. Used by most states.
**Flat tax.** A single rate applied to all taxable income. Simpler than graduated but considered regressive by some. Used by about a dozen states.
**No income tax.** Nine states have no individual income tax: **Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire (wages only), South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington (wages only), and Wyoming.** These states typically lean on sales taxes, property taxes, severance taxes (oil/gas), or tourism taxes for revenue.
## Resident vs non-resident taxation
**Resident.** You pay tax on ALL your income to your state of residency, no matter where earned.
**Non-resident.** You pay tax to states where you EARN income (work, run a business, own rental property) — but only on income from those states.
**Reciprocity agreements.** Some states have agreements (e.g., NJ-PA, MD-VA, IL-IA) where residents of one state working in the other pay only home-state tax.
**Credit for taxes paid to another state.** If you pay tax to a state where you don't reside, your home state usually gives you a credit so you're not double-taxed.
## Common tax issues for individuals
- **Moving mid-year** — both old and new state may want a piece, file part-year resident returns
- **Remote work** — "convenience of the employer" rules in NY, NJ, AR, NE, PA, DE can tax remote workers based on the employer's location
- **Selling property in another state** — capital gains may be taxed in both the property state AND your home state (with credit)
- **Inheritance and estate tax** — most states don't have a state estate tax; some do; tax-friendly states are popular for retirement
- **Social Security taxation** — some states tax SS, most don't
- **Pension taxation** — varies wildly state to state
## Common tax issues for businesses
- **Nexus** — the connection that makes you taxable in a state (physical presence, economic presence post-Wayfair, employees)
- **Apportionment** — how multistate income is divided among states
- **Combined vs separate reporting** — for unitary business groups
- **Sales tax** — separate from income tax; obligations triggered by post-Wayfair (2018) economic nexus
- **Pass-through entity tax (PTET) elections** — workaround for federal SALT cap
## State estate and inheritance tax (separate from income tax)
**Estate tax** (paid by the estate) — currently in: CT, HI, IL, ME, MD, MA, MN, NY, OR, RI, VT, WA, DC.
**Inheritance tax** (paid by the recipient) — currently in: KY, MD, NE, NJ, PA. (Maryland has both.)
Federal estate tax exemption is ~$13.6M (2024) so most estates don't owe federal estate tax — but state thresholds are often much lower.
## When to talk to a tax professional
- Multi-state income (live in one state, work in another)
- Self-employment or business income
- Significant capital gains or investment income
- Recent move or planning to move
- Inheritance
- Audit notice from IRS or state
- Cryptocurrency transactions
- Foreign income or accounts (FBAR / FATCA)
- Estate planning
## What you should do
For routine W-2 returns with no complications, free file software (or human tax-prep services) usually does the job. For anything multi-state, business-related, or audit-related, hire a CPA or tax attorney. Most Michigan CPAs offer flat-fee returns and free initial consultations on planning issues. Tax attorneys are essential for audits, criminal tax matters, and substantial planning.
---
*This guide is general information about Michigan tax law as of early 2026 and is not tax or legal advice. Tax rates, brackets, and rules change frequently — Michigan has reformed or scheduled reforms to its income tax in recent years. Talk to a licensed CPA or tax attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.