Michigan applies a flat 4.25% income tax statewide. Some cities add their own layer. Enter your salary to see your take-home number.
Your estimated take-home pay
$2,254
per paycheck
$58,599 annually · Effective tax rate: 21.9%
Michigan's flat rate makes the state-level calculation straightforward: multiply your taxable income by 0.0425 and you are done. Where it gets less predictable is at the city level. Detroit imposes its own income tax of 2.4% on residents and 1.2% on non-residents who work in the city. Grand Rapids, Lansing, Flint, and about two dozen other municipalities also charge local income taxes ranging from 0.5% to 2%. If your job is in one of these cities, the extra layer turns Michigan's effective rate from "reasonable" to "noticeable" fast. Ask about city taxes before you sign a lease, not after.
Michigan's appeal in a paycheck comparison is less about the tax rate and more about what the take-home pay buys. The median home price statewide hovers around $235,000, which is roughly what a one-bedroom condo costs in most coastal cities. A dual-income household earning $130,000 combined can own a three-bedroom house, fund retirement accounts, and still have room in the budget, a lifestyle that requires $200,000+ in most parts of the Northeast or West Coast. The calculator gives you the tax picture. The real question is what you plan to do with the net number, and Michigan makes that net number stretch further than the coasts will.