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Grand Junction, Michigan

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Grand Junction, MI

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STR Regulations for Grand Junction, Michigan

I do not have any city- or county-level regulatory content specific to Grand Junction, MI from your provided materials. The pages you provided are for Grand Junction, Colorado (city of Grand Junction), and for Michigan generally (statewide news/advocacy context and example ordinances in Douglas, MI). Therefore, the following guidance is focused on Michigan state-level rules and references to nearby examples for context. If you confirm Grand Junction, MI operates under a local ordinance, I can update this guide accordingly. The overview is concise: Grand Junction, MI does not appear to have city-specific short‑term rental regulations in the provided content; operations therefore follow Michigan state law and any applicable county-level frameworks. If county‑specific rules exist for Grand Junction, MI, I do not have them in your inputs.

Michigan State‑Level Short‑Term Rental Environment (No Statewide License)

  • No statewide licensing or registration for short‑term rentals is provided in the materials. STR activity is generally defined as stays of less than 30 days.
  • Local municipalities may (and often do) adopt their own ordinances that impose registration, caps, safety inspections, occupancy limits, and other operational conditions.
  • Taxes: Short‑term rentals are subject to Michigan sales tax and use tax on the lodging charge, and most jurisdictions also impose a local lodging tax. The specific lodging tax rate is local; verify with the municipality (and any county) where your property is located. Ensure you collect and remit both state and local lodging taxes as applicable. Keep clear records to document tax collection and timely remittance.

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Grand Junction?

Grand Junction hosts earn a median $35,453/year with $287 ADR and 56% occupancy.

Top performers pull in $52,933+ per year.

See the full Grand Junction market breakdown →

Examples of Municipal/County Rules in Michigan (Illustrative, Not Grand Junction, MI)

Local governments across Michigan have adopted varied approaches. The patterns below are illustrative, not exhaustive, and do not bind Grand Junction, MI unless the city or county there adopts a similar ordinance.

  • Grand Rapids (Kent County): Licensing required; capped at 200 licenses annually; the license covers one property, and the owner must live on the property to rent out a room.
  • Charlevoix County: Annual licensing required; a contact person must be available 24/7 to respond to noise, nuisance, or disturbances; renewal and inspection requirements apply.
  • Wayne County (including Detroit): In Detroit, an STR may not be rented for more than 90 days per calendar year.
  • Traverse City (Grand Traverse County): Licensing required; outside of residential zones (including downtown/commercial areas) STRs are permitted; within residential zones, STRs typically require the owner to live on site (room within the landlord’s house).
  • South Haven (Van Buren County): Licensing required; 1:4 rental cap (for every STR, there must be four standard residences).
  • Holland (Ottawa County): Licensing required; STRs allowed in residential areas where the owner lives on property; off‑site owners have designated zoning areas where STRs are permitted; exemptions exist for special events (e.g., Tulip Time) for short stays.
  • Grand Haven (Ottawa County): Annual registration required for all rental units, including short‑term rentals; a fee is charged per unit; there are location restrictions.
  • Douglas (Allegan County): Registration required with the city clerk; certification valid for three years; fire inspection every 36 months; clear safety compliance (smoke/CO alarms, egress, extinguishers, posting of emergency info, etc.) and strict occupancy rules (no individual room subletting) are codified.

These examples demonstrate the diversity of local controls across Michigan. They are not binding in Grand Junction, MI unless your local government adopts comparable requirements.

How to Start a Short‑Term Rental Business in Grand Junction, MI (State Compliance Focus)

  • Confirm there is no local (city or county) STR ordinance in Grand Junction, MI that applies to you. If a county‑wide rule exists, obtain the current requirements and follow them.
  • Operate within Michigan law:
    • Comply with all applicable building, fire, health, and safety codes even if there is no local registration regime.
    • If a property management company is used, keep an authorized local contact available to respond to issues in the manner required by local ordinances in other Michigan cities (this is a common municipal expectation, though not a state mandate).
    • Ensure guests and occupancy meet reasonable safety standards; many municipalities reference the International Fire Code and International Building Code provisions (see the Douglas example for safety expectations).
  • Taxes:
    • Collect Michigan sales tax and use tax on lodging fees.
    • Collect and remit any local lodging tax applicable to Grand Junction, MI. If unsure, contact the city/township or county treasurer/finance office to verify the rate and filing process.
    • Maintain detailed records of guest nights, revenues, taxes collected, and remittances.
  • Zoning:
    • Verify your property’s zoning with the local zoning administrator/assessor. If a local STR ordinance exists, confirm whether STRs are permitted as‑of‑right, require a special use permit, or are prohibited in your zone.
    • If no local ordinance exists, confirm that the zoning classification allows short‑term occupancy and that you will not create a nuisance or violate deed restrictions or homeowners association rules.
  • Insurance:
    • Obtain adequate liability and property coverage for STR operations. Review exclusions for short‑term rental activity.
  • Guest safety:
    • Install and maintain smoke alarms, carbon monoxide detectors (if applicable), and at least one appropriately rated portable fire extinguisher per level. Post emergency information (address, evacuation routes, contact numbers) and keep egress paths clear. Verify clear house numbers visible from the street for emergency response.
    • Consider an emergency contact card as shown in some Michigan municipalities (e.g., Douglas).
  • Advertising:
    • Comply with Michigan law; if a local ordinance is adopted requiring a registration number or permit number to appear in advertisements, incorporate it accordingly.

Documents, Permits, Licenses, and Guidelines (Grand Junction, MI)

  • None appear in your inputs for Grand Junction, MI. The references below are illustrative from Michigan municipalities:
    • Registration application and fee (e.g., Douglas: $350 registration fee; valid for 3 years; reinspection fee if failed inspection).
    • Fire/life safety inspection at least every 36 months (example: Douglas).
    • Proof of insurance where required by local ordinance.
    • Local contact information for on‑call response to disturbances.
    • Guest safety materials (emergency info cards, evacuation plans, posted address).
    • Zoning confirmation from local authorities.
    • Tax registration/filings for state sales/use tax and local lodging tax.

Links to source pages (examples from Michigan municipalities, not Grand Junction, MI)

  • Douglas Short-Term Rental Packet (2025) — Douglas, MI STR ordinance: www.douglasmi.gov/DocumentCenter/View/307/Short-Term-Rental-Packet-2025-PDF
  • Michigan Municipal League — Short-Term Rental Resources (statewide advocacy and examples): blogs.mml.org/wp/short-term-rentals/
  • GovOS — Michigan STR report and municipal examples: govos.com/blog/michigan-short-term-rental-report/
  • Douglas ordinance (alternate link): ci.douglas.mi.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Short-Term-Rental-Ordinance-2019.pdf
  • South Haven STR registration: www.southhavenmi.gov/building_services/short-term_rental_registration.php
  • Holland Rental Certification/Licensing Guide: www.cityofholland.com/848/Rental-Certification-Licensing-Guide
  • Grand Haven Rental Housing Program: grandhaven.org/departments/public-safety/rental-housing-program/

Note: The Grand Junction, CO page included in your inputs is unrelated to Grand Junction, MI and is not applicable here.

Contact Information (State-Level and Illustrative Local Offices)

Because your inputs do not include a Grand Junction, MI authority for STRs, the following contacts are for verification of state and local lodging tax applicability and building/fire code questions. Replace with Grand Junction, MI contacts once confirmed.

  • Michigan Department of Treasury — Tax assistance:

    • Website: www.michigan.gov/taxes
    • Phone: Local offices vary by region; see the Treasury website for the nearest office.
  • Grand Junction, MI (location to confirm) — Village/City Hall (tax and zoning inquiries):

    • Address: Grand Junction, MI (confirm the exact address with your county clerk or township)
    • Phone: To be provided by Grand Junction, MI
    • Email: To be provided by Grand Junction, MI
  • County Government — Contact the county clerk/treasurer to confirm lodging taxes and zoning:

    • Website: Locate via the official county site for the county where Grand Junction, MI is situated
    • Phone and Email: Obtain from the county website or clerk’s office
  • Building/Fire Safety — Many municipalities in Michigan coordinate inspections with the local fire department and building department. In Douglas (example), inspections are handled by the Saugatuck Township Fire District. For Grand Junction, MI, confirm whether the township or county handles fire/life safety inspections:

    • Local Fire Department (Grand Junction, MI) — Phone and Email: To be provided
    • Local Building Department (Grand Junction, MI) — Phone and Email: To be provided
  • Michigan Municipal League (advocacy and resources, not a regulator): blogs.mml.org/wp/short-term-rentals/

    • Email and phone: See MML website for contact details

Practical Next Steps for Grand Junction, MI Investors

  1. Confirm local status
    • Ask the township, county clerk, and city/village (if applicable) whether a local STR ordinance applies to Grand Junction, MI and obtain the text of any adopted rules.
  2. Determine tax obligations
    • Verify Michigan sales/use tax and local lodging tax rates and filing frequency with the appropriate local authority and state Treasury; set up tax accounts before beginning operations.
  3. Zoning and safety
    • Confirm your property’s zoning allows STR use; ensure fire and life safety measures meet or exceed typical local standards (e.g., smoke/CO alarms, extinguishers, clear address visibility, posted emergency plan).
  4. Documentation
    • Maintain a permit/registration file (if required), inspection records, and a complete audit trail of guest stays, revenues, and tax remittances.
  5. Ongoing compliance
    • If a local ordinance is later adopted, comply with registration renewal timelines, inspection cycles, and any caps or contact-person requirements.

If you confirm a city- or county-level ordinance for Grand Junction, MI, please share it, and I will update this guide with the exact requirements, fees, renewal cycles, caps, and contact details specific to that jurisdiction.

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Grand Junction

Market Saturation Score

036912
Low Saturation
0/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
0–1 declining months: minimal saturation pressure — revenue trends are stable.
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Photos of Grand Junction

Overview of Grand Junction

Columbia Township is a civil township of Van Buren County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 2,714 at the 2000 census, down to 2,588 at the 2010 census. Columbia Township is a largely rural area with many farms. It is also home to several lakes with a significant percentage of the population living on them, frequently retirees from Chicago. Many summer lake cottages are owned by families with roots in the Chicago area.

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