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The Michigan Paycheck Calculator estimates your take-home pay after federal income taxes, Michigan state income tax at a flat 4.25% rate, FICA contributions, and any applicable city income taxes. Michigan uses a straightforward flat tax system where all taxable income is taxed at 4.25% regardless of income level. The state begins with federal adjusted gross income and applies Michigan-specific adjustments and a personal exemption of $5,400 per person for 2024. Michigan is notable for its city income tax system. Twenty-four Michigan cities impose their own income taxes, with Detroit levying the highest rate at 2.4% for residents and 1.2% for non-residents who work in the city. Other cities with income taxes include Grand Rapids (1.5% resident / 0.75% non-resident), Lansing (1% resident / 0.5% non-resident), Flint (1% / 0.5%), Saginaw (1.5% / 0.75%), and others. City income taxes are based on both where you live and where you work, with different rates for residents and non-residents. Michigan does not impose additional state payroll taxes such as disability insurance or paid family leave. The state provides a generous personal exemption of $5,400 per person, which is significantly higher than many other states. Michigan also fully exempts public pension income from state tax and provides partial exemptions for private retirement income, making it relatively favorable for retirees. This calculator serves employees across Michigan's diverse economy including automotive manufacturing (Ford, General Motors, Stellantis), healthcare (Beaumont, Spectrum Health, Henry Ford Health), technology (growing sectors in Ann Arbor and Detroit), education (University of Michigan, Michigan State University), and tourism. The combination of the flat state tax and variable city taxes makes location a critical factor in determining take-home pay, particularly for workers in the Detroit metro area.
Net Pay = Gross Pay - Federal Tax - Michigan State Tax (4.25% flat) - City Income Tax (if applicable) - FICA Michigan State Tax (2024): 4.25% flat on Michigan taxable income Personal Exemption: $5,400 per person (2024) City Income Tax Examples: Detroit: 2.4% resident / 1.2% non-resident Grand Rapids: 1.5% resident / 0.75% non-resident Lansing: 1.0% resident / 0.5% non-resident Flint: 1.0% resident / 0.5% non-resident Saginaw: 1.5% resident / 0.75% non-resident Kalamazoo: 1.0% resident / 0.5% non-resident FICA: 6.2% SS + 1.45% Medicare + 0.9% over $200K
- 1Enter your gross pay, pay frequency, and work and residence locations. Michigan's city income taxes depend on both where you live and where you work. If you live in Detroit, you pay 2.4%. If you live outside Detroit but work there, you pay 1.2%. If you neither live nor work in a taxing city, no city tax applies. Michigan's major employers include Ford Motor Company, General Motors, Stellantis (formerly FCA), Beaumont Health, Spectrum Health, Dow Chemical, and the state's major universities.
- 2Federal income tax is calculated based on W-4 elections using 2024 federal brackets from 10% to 37%. Pre-tax deductions such as 401(k) contributions and health insurance reduce federal taxable income.
- 3Michigan state income tax is calculated at the flat 4.25% rate. Michigan begins with federal AGI, applies state-specific adjustments, and subtracts personal exemptions of $5,400 per person. The flat rate means calculation is straightforward: every additional dollar of taxable income costs exactly 4.25 cents in state tax. Michigan does not have a state standard deduction; the personal exemption serves as the primary reduction.
- 4If you live or work in one of Michigan's 24 cities with an income tax, that tax is calculated and withheld separately. Detroit's 2.4% resident rate is the highest in the state. The city tax is calculated on a different base than the state tax and may have its own exemptions and deductions. Employers in taxing cities are required to withhold city tax from employee paychecks.
- 5FICA taxes are calculated at standard federal rates. Michigan has no additional state payroll taxes, disability insurance, or paid family leave deductions beyond the state income tax and applicable city taxes.
- 6The calculator totals all deductions. A Detroit resident working in Detroit pays 4.25% state + 2.4% city = 6.65% combined. A suburban worker commuting to Detroit pays 4.25% state + 1.2% non-resident city = 5.45%. A worker in a non-taxing city pays only 4.25% state.
- 7Review your results and verify withholding using Michigan Form MI-W4. If you work in a city with an income tax, you may also need to file a city income tax return (such as Detroit Form D-1040). Ensure your employer is withholding the correct city tax based on your residence and work location.
Gross biweekly: $3,653.85. Federal withholding: ~$387. Michigan state tax: 4.25% x ($95,000 - $5,400) = $3,808/yr or $146.46/period. Detroit city: 2.4% x $95,000 = $2,280/yr or $87.69/period. FICA: $226.54 + $52.98 = $279.52. Total deductions: ~$900.67. Net pay: ~$2,753.18.
Gross biweekly: $3,000. Federal withholding: ~$115. Michigan tax: 4.25% x ($78,000 - $21,600 for 4 exemptions) = $2,397/yr or $92.19/period. Detroit non-resident: 1.2% x $78,000 = $936/yr or $36/period. FICA: $186 + $43.50 = $229.50. Total deductions: ~$472.69. Net pay: ~$2,527.31.
Gross biweekly: $2,500. Federal withholding: ~$176. Michigan tax: 4.25% x ($65,000 - $5,400) = $2,533/yr or $97.42/period. Grand Rapids: 1.5% x $65,000 = $975/yr or $37.50/period. FICA: $155 + $36.25 = $191.25. Total deductions: ~$502.17. Net pay: ~$1,997.83.
Gross semi-monthly: $2,291.67. Federal withholding: ~$141. Michigan tax: 4.25% x ($55,000 - $5,400) = $2,108/yr or $87.83/period. No city tax (Ann Arbor has no city income tax). FICA: $142.08 + $33.23 = $175.31. Total deductions: ~$404.14. Net pay: ~$1,887.53.
Automotive industry workers at Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis manufacturing plants and corporate offices use this calculator to understand their combined state and city tax obligations. The Big Three and their vast supplier network employ hundreds of thousands of workers across Michigan. Workers at Detroit headquarters pay the city tax, while those at suburban plants in non-taxing cities pay only the state rate.
Healthcare professionals at Beaumont Health, Henry Ford Health, Corewell Health (formerly Spectrum Health and Beaumont), and other major systems use this calculator. Michigan is one of the largest healthcare employment states, and many hospitals are located in cities with income taxes. A nurse at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit faces a different tax burden than one at Beaumont in Royal Oak (no city tax).
University employees at the University of Michigan, Michigan State University, Wayne State University, and other institutions use this calculator. Ann Arbor does not impose a city income tax despite being a major city, while Lansing (MSU area) does impose a 1% tax. This difference affects take-home pay comparisons for academic job candidates.
Technology and startup workers in Detroit's revitalized downtown and Midtown neighborhoods use this calculator to account for the 2.4% Detroit city tax on top of the state rate. Detroit's growing tech scene has attracted workers who may not initially realize the city tax impact on their paychecks.
Detroit Renaissance Zone Workers
Michigan has designated Renaissance Zones in several cities, including areas of Detroit, where businesses and residents may receive partial or full exemption from state and local taxes. Workers in Renaissance Zone businesses may have different tax obligations. However, these zones have been phasing out, and the specific exemptions depend on the zone designation and applicable dates.
Cross-Border Workers with Ohio and Indiana
Michigan has reciprocal tax agreements with several states including Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. Under these agreements, residents of those states working in Michigan pay tax only to their home state, and Michigan residents working in those states pay tax only to Michigan. However, Michigan city income taxes may still apply to non-residents working in taxing cities, and the reciprocal agreement does not cover city taxes.
Seasonal Tourism Workers
Northern Michigan's tourism economy (Traverse City, Mackinac Island, ski resorts) employs many seasonal workers. These workers may not earn enough to owe significant Michigan tax after the $5,400 personal exemption. A single seasonal worker earning $25,000 would have only about $19,600 in Michigan taxable income, resulting in approximately $833 in annual state tax. Most tourist-area cities do not impose city income taxes.
| Jurisdiction | Resident Rate | Non-Resident Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Michigan State | 4.25% (flat) | 4.25% (flat) |
| Detroit | 2.4% | 1.2% |
| Grand Rapids | 1.5% | 0.75% |
| Saginaw | 1.5% | 0.75% |
| Lansing | 1.0% | 0.5% |
| Flint | 1.0% | 0.5% |
| Kalamazoo | 1.0% | 0.5% |
| Ann Arbor | None | None |
| Personal Exemption | $5,400/person | — |
Which Michigan cities have income taxes?
Twenty-four Michigan cities impose income taxes. The largest are Detroit (2.4% resident / 1.2% non-resident), Grand Rapids (1.5% / 0.75%), Flint (1% / 0.5%), Lansing (1% / 0.5%), Saginaw (1.5% / 0.75%), and Kalamazoo (1% / 0.5%). A complete list is available from the Michigan Department of Treasury.
Does the city tax apply where I live or where I work?
Both matter. If you live in a taxing city, you pay the resident rate on all income. If you work in a taxing city but live elsewhere, you pay the non-resident rate on income earned in that city. If you both live and work in taxing cities, you may owe tax to both, but credits are typically available to prevent double taxation of the same income.
How does Michigan tax retirement income?
Michigan fully exempts public pension income (state, local, federal, military pensions) from state tax. For private retirement income (401(k), IRA), taxpayers born before 1946 receive a generous exemption; those born 1946-1952 receive a reduced exemption; and those born after 1952 receive standard personal exemptions only. Social Security is generally exempt.
Is Michigan's flat rate going to change?
Michigan's flat rate has been at 4.25% since 2012. There was a brief reduction to 4.05% in 2023 triggered by revenue surplus rules, but it reverted to 4.25% for 2024. Future rate changes depend on legislative action and revenue triggers.
Does Ann Arbor have a city income tax?
No. Despite being one of Michigan's largest and most economically significant cities (home to the University of Michigan), Ann Arbor does not impose a city income tax. This makes it more favorable for workers compared to nearby cities like Detroit or even Lansing that do have city taxes.
Can I get a credit for city taxes paid to another city?
Yes. Michigan city tax rules generally provide credits to prevent double taxation. If you live in one taxing city and work in another, you receive a credit on your resident city return for taxes paid to your work city. However, the credit is limited to the tax you would owe your home city on the same income.
विशेष टिप
If you work in Detroit or another Michigan city with an income tax, the difference between living inside versus outside the city is significant. A Detroit resident earning $80,000 pays 2.4% ($1,920) in city tax, while a suburban commuter working in Detroit pays 1.2% ($960), a savings of $960 per year. However, factor in commuting costs, property tax differences, and housing prices before making a decision based solely on city income tax. Also take advantage of the $5,400 personal exemption per person, which shields a meaningful amount of income from the 4.25% state tax.
क्या आप जानते हैं?
Detroit's 2.4% city income tax rate is the highest local income tax rate in Michigan and among the highest city income tax rates in the nation. The tax was originally established in 1962 when Detroit was the fifth-largest city in the United States and a booming automotive manufacturing center. Despite the city's population declining from 1.8 million in 1960 to approximately 620,000 today, the tax has remained as a critical revenue source, generating over $300 million annually. The non-resident 1.2% rate means that suburban commuters also contribute to Detroit's tax base.