Traverse City and the Leelanau peninsula anchor the premium market, the Lake Michigan shore towns from New Buffalo to Petoskey run a strong seasonal economy, and the Upper Peninsula carries a growing remote-cabin segment. Detroit and Grand Rapids add urban volume with a different risk texture entirely.
The shoreline problemThe Great Lakes run multi-year high-and-low water cycles, and the recent record-high years put erosion, bluff failure, and shoreline flooding on underwriters’ maps in a way they had not been for a generation. The hard part for owners: much of that damage lands in the flood exclusion or gets treated as earth movement, neither of which a standard property form covers. Waterfront Michigan properties need that conversation explicitly, before a high-water year, not during one. Inland, the state shares the upper-Midwest freeze profile: pipe bursts, ice dams, and vacancy clauses.
Freeze and pipe-burst claims fail without documented winter protocols. Shoreline and water-intrusion losses get parsed hard against flood and earth-movement exclusions, often unsuccessfully for the owner. And erosion damage is almost never covered at all, which makes siting and setback part of the risk decision at purchase.
Michigan has no statewide preemption, so control sits entirely with local government, and the spread is wide: some shoreline towns welcome rentals, others cap or effectively prohibit non-owner-occupied STRs, and the rules shift with local politics. In Michigan, the township is the regulatory unit that matters.