Written by: Mikki Silvey, Senior Tax Manager, Property Tax

When Assessments Hit, the Financial Impact Can Be Significant

Michigan sets property values every year, and each year stands on its own. While assessment notices may feel routine, 2026 values carry long-term consequences due to how taxable value increases are capped and carried forward over time.

When an assessment is successfully appealed and reduced, the taxable value basis is effectively reset, limiting future annual increases by the rate of inflation (or 5%, whichever is lower) until the property transfers or if there is a loss or addition. When owners do nothing, they continue paying taxes on a higher taxable value that compounds annually, meaning the same inflation rate is applied to a higher base―resulting in greater long-term tax liability.

What Michigan Property Owners Need to Know for 2026

In Michigan, there are three values associated with a parcel:

  1. True cash value-TCV (synonymous with fair market value)
  2. Assessed value-AV (50% of true cash value)
  3. Taxable value-TV (this is the value used to calculate taxes)

The taxable value is considered a capped value. This value can only increase annually by the rate of inflation or 5%, whichever is less, until the property transfers or if there is a loss or addition. While there can be nuances, the taxable value will generally increase at a slower rate than the assessed value; and over long-term ownership, the assessed and taxable values may have a substantial delta between the two.

The taxable value can never be higher than the assessed value. For example, the inflation rate calculated for the 2023 and 2024 tax years exceeded 5%. Therefore, the taxable value increase for those tax years maxed out at 5%. The 2025 taxable value increase was 3.1%, and the taxable value increase for the 2026 tax year is 2.7%.

Key Reassessment Facts

VALUATION (LIEN) DATEDecember 31, 2025
TAX YEARS IMPACTED2026
JURISDICTIONS AFFECTEDStatewide
ASSESSMENT NOTICES EXPECTEDFebruary 2026
APPEAL DEADLINESJune 1, 2026
Real property parcels classified commercial or industrial may be appealed directly to the Michigan Tax Tribunal (MTT) by the filing deadline of May 31, 2026 (extended to June 1, 2026, as May 31 falls on a Sunday). Personal property parcels classified commercial or industrial may be appealed directly to the MTT by May 31, 2026 (June 1, 2026) if a statement of assessable property was filed before the commencement of the 2026 March Board of Review.

Where Property Owners Are Most at Risk of Overassessment in 2026

Because Michigan assessments are typically handled at a local level, risk is driven by jurisdiction-specific market assumptions and mass appraisal techniques. Owners should pay close attention to whether assessed values reflect current market realities, particularly following recent volatility in interest rates, operating costs, and vacancy patterns.

Valuations may be generated by mass appraisal models, which may not fully capture property-specific issues such as deferred maintenance, functional obsolescence, or localized market softness. Michigan is also a fee simple valuation state, meaning assessments typically rely on market rents, not contract rents―an important distinction from leased‑fee income approaches.

What This Means for Your Bottom Line

  • Assessment reductions can provide long‑term benefit by resetting the taxable value growth base
  • CPI‑driven taxable value increases were 5% in 2023–2024, 3.1% in 2025, and 2.7% in 2026

Valuation Trends by Property Type

What You Do Next Matters

Early preparation matters in Michigan because reviewing values proactively allows owners to determine whether an appeal is warranted and whether potential savings justify the effort, given taxable value constraints.

DMA adds the most leverage early by modeling assessed vs. taxable value dynamics, evaluating market alignment, and outlining a defensible valuation position and appeal strategy to determine whether an appeal is warranted.

Why Michigan Property Owners Choose to Partner with DMA

DMA brings experience working within the local assessment environment, including familiarity with assessor practices, valuation methodologies, and the development and review of assessments. That perspective, along with established professional relationships in the field, helps DMA anticipate how valuation conclusions will be evaluated and how we can provide the strongest support for valuations.

DMA qualifies appeals before they are filed, so our clients only pursue cases with real, supportable upside. Our process starts by evaluating true market alignment and reconciling assessed versus taxable value dynamics, then building a defensible valuation position supported by market evidence. This process confirms whether an appeal is warranted before our clients invest time and resources.

DMA quantifies potential tax savings alongside risk and likelihood of success, so our clients’ decisions are economic rather than speculative. When an appeal is warranted, DMA builds a focused, well-structured case supported by clear valuation evidence. The result is a streamlined process that minimizes the effort required from our clients and keeps the focus on outcomes.

Get a Risk-Free Property Assessment Review

We’ll compare your projected or actual assessment to market evidence and tell you whether an appeal makes sense.

Connect with DMA’s Michigan property tax experts to review your portfolio, identify overassessment risk, and uncover potential savings.

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This website content should be used for general informational purposes only, and not as a substitute for consultation with professional tax, legal, or other competent advisors. Before making any decision or taking any action based upon information contained on this website, you should consult with a DMA professional.