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Straight answers for Detroit landlords and residents — no jargon, no fluff.

For Owners

Detroit rental certification, explained

Before you can legally rent a home in the City of Detroit, the property has to be registered and pass inspection. It trips up a lot of owners — here's the short version of how it works.

The three steps

  • Register the rental. Every rental property must be registered with the City's Buildings, Safety Engineering and Environmental Department (BSEED).
  • Pass inspection & lead clearance. The home needs a Certificate of Compliance, which requires a passing inspection. For properties built before 1978, that includes lead-based paint clearance.
  • Renew on schedule. Certificates are time-limited and must be renewed, with re-inspection, to keep the rental compliant.

We handle this end to end for the properties we manage — registration, scheduling inspections, coordinating any repairs, and keeping certificates current so your rental never lapses into non-compliance. Rules change, so we always confirm the latest requirements directly with the City.

For Owners

Michigan security deposit law: the rules that matter

Security deposits are one of the most common sources of landlord-tenant disputes — and most are avoidable by following Michigan's rules to the letter.

  • Maximum deposit: Michigan caps a security deposit at one-and-a-half months' rent.
  • Move-in inventory: Tenants must receive a written inventory checklist of the unit's condition at move-in — documented with photos on our end.
  • Returning the deposit: After move-out, the landlord must provide an itemized list of any damages and return the balance within the timeframe the law requires.
  • Hold it properly: Deposits must be kept in a regulated account, and tenants must be told where.

We document everything — detailed move-in and move-out inspections with timestamps and photos — so deposit decisions are fair, defensible, and rarely disputed. This isn't legal advice; for a specific situation, talk to a Michigan attorney.

For Owners

What should your Detroit rental rent for?

Price too high and your unit sits empty (every vacant month erases a chunk of the year's return). Price too low and you leave money on the table. Here's how we land on the right number.

What actually moves rent

  • Real comps, not guesses. We pull recent leased comparables in your specific neighborhood — Corktown rents differently than Bagley.
  • Condition and updates. Kitchens, baths, flooring, and in-unit laundry carry real premiums.
  • Seasonality. Demand in Detroit is strongest late spring through summer; timing a turn matters.
  • Total return, not just rent. A slightly lower rent that fills in two weeks usually beats a higher rent that sits for two months.

Want a real number for your property? Our free rental analysis gives you a data-backed range and a plan to hit it.

Get a Free Rental Analysis

Have a question we didn't cover?

We're happy to talk it through — owners and residents alike. Real answers from real people, same business day.

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