Michigan has very strict limitations on property tax increases, due to the 1978 Headlee amendment and the 1994 Proposal A amendment to the State Constitution.
Personal income in Michigan is taxed at a flat rate of 4.35% the fifth-lowest income tax rate in the country among states with personal income taxes.
Michigans 6% sales tax is extremely competitive throughout the Great Lakes region, 1.5 percentage points lower overall than Ohio and 3.25 percentage points lower overall than Illinois.
Any sales tax increase requires a favorable vote from the citizens of Michigan. Tax change ballots are held in conjunction with other regularly scheduled elections.
The state of Michigan and Oakland County are dedicated to ensuring a business-friendly environment, including offering the best tax credits and incentives for both our existing businesses and businesses looking to locate in Oakland County.
LOCAL TAXES
Michigan has no local sales taxes, which makes Michigans overall sales tax much less burdensome than many other locations throughout the United States.
Sixty out of sixty-one communities within Oakland County have no local income tax at all; the one that does has a very modest 1% income tax rate for resident workers and a 0.5% income tax rate for nonresident workers.
Oakland Countys 28 public school districts receive a good portion of their funding directly from the state; however, each district is at least partially funded by local property taxes (called a millage) that are approved by the voters of the district.
- In the 2006/2007 school year, nine out of eleven school millage proposals in Oakland County were passed by district voters.
Property taxes are paid to the Oakland County Treasurer, who distributes the funds to the state, school districts, County departments, and local communities as prescribed by law.
Source: Michigan Economic Development Corporation, Citizens Research Council of Michigan Updated: August 2007