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Michigan · State Tax Guide

Michigan Capital Gains Tax Rate (2026)

Top State Rate
4.25%
Rate Structure
Flat 4.25%
Preferential LT Rate?
No
Max Combined (Fed + State)
28.1%

Michigan capital gains tax overview

Michigan has a flat 4.25% income tax. Capital gains are taxed the same as ordinary income.

No preferential long-term rate: Unlike the federal system, Michigan taxed identically to ordinary income at the state level. This makes timing strategies especially important for Michigan residents with large gains.

Federal + Michigan combined rates

Your total capital gains tax bill includes both layers — federal and state. Here is what a Michigan investor pays in 2026 for long-term gains:

Federal Long-Term RateMichigan State RateCombined RatePlus NIIT (if applicable)
0%4.25%4.25%8.1%
15%4.25%19.3%23.1%
20%4.25%24.3%28.1%

The NIIT (Net Investment Income Tax) adds an extra 3.8% for taxpayers whose MAGI exceeds $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly). It is a federal tax only — Michigan does not have an equivalent.

How Michigan compares to other states

Michigan's top rate of 4.25% places it in the lower-middle tier of state capital gains taxation. For comparison:

Tax-reduction strategies for Michigan residents

With a top state rate of 4.25%, minimizing capital gains tax is particularly important in Michigan. Key strategies:

Try the calculator: Use our free capital gains calculator to see your exact federal tax instantly. Pro users get automatic Michigan state tax added to every calculation.

Frequently asked questions — Michigan

Does Michigan tax short-term and long-term gains differently?

No — Michigan taxes both short-term and long-term capital gains as ordinary income at the same rates as wages. There is no state-level preferential rate for patience. The federal system, however, taxes long-term gains at 0/15/20% vs. up to 37% for short-term — a significant difference that applies regardless of state.

Do I need to file a Michigan tax return if I only have capital gains?

If you have capital gains income and meet Michigan's filing threshold, you are required to file a Michigan state income tax return. The threshold is typically similar to the standard deduction amount — check the MI Department of Revenue for the current year's filing requirements.

What if I moved to Michigan mid-year?

If you moved to Michigan during the year, you are a part-year resident. Michigan generally taxes capital gains realized while you were a Michigan resident. Gains realized before you moved may be taxable by your prior state. Keep detailed records of when each sale occurred relative to your move date.