Fair Housing Guide — Michigan
Federal Fair Housing Act + Michigan protected classes and application rules
Federal Protected Classes (Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3604)
These protections apply in every state. You may never discriminate based on:
Michigan Additional Protected Classes
Michigan law adds the following protections beyond the federal baseline:
- Age
- Marital status
- Height and weight
Source of Income / Housing Vouchers (Section 8)
Michigan does not have statewide source-of-income protection. However, some cities and counties in Michigan may have local ordinances that do protect it. Check your municipality.
Criminal History Screening
Michigan has no specific law restricting criminal background screening beyond the federal Fair Housing Act (which prohibits using criminal history as a pretext for racial or national-origin discrimination). Apply criteria consistently to all applicants.
What You Can and Cannot Ask
✗ Cannot Ask or Advertise
- Race or racial background
- Religion or religious practices
- National origin or ethnicity
- Sex or gender (federal)
- Disability or handicap status
- Familial status (having children under 18, pregnancy)
- Age (unless senior housing)
- Marital status
- Height or weight
✓ Can Ask (Applied Consistently)
- Proof of income (pay stubs, bank statements, employer letters)
- Employment status and employer contact
- Rental history and references from prior landlords
- Consent to run a credit check
- Personal references
- Number of occupants (to apply occupancy standards consistently)
- Criminal background check
- Income-to-rent ratio
Advertising Rules
Rental listings must not indicate any preference or limitation based on protected classes. Avoid language such as:
- "Perfect for young professionals" (implies familial status preference)
- "No children" or "adults only" (familial status — illegal unless 55+ senior housing)
- "Christian household" or "religious community" (religion)
- "No Section 8" (may be illegal in some local jurisdictions)
- "Native English speakers preferred" (national origin)
- Any description that signals race, color, or national origin preference
Safe language: focus on objective property features, income requirements, and pet/smoking policies.
City-Level Rules & Notable Notes
Michigan: Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act adds age, marital status, and height/weight protections. Ann Arbor adds sexual orientation and gender identity locally. Detroit Fair Housing Ordinance may provide additional protections.
This tool provides legal information, not legal advice. Nothing on this site creates an attorney-client relationship. For advice about your specific situation, consult a licensed attorney in your state.