How retirement income is taxed in Michigan
Michigan applies a flat 4.25% income tax rate. Here's what that means for your retirement income and how to manage it.
Retirement tax landscape
Social Security is fully exempt. Pensions and retirement account withdrawals are fully taxable with no special exclusion.
Understanding how Michigan treats each type of retirement income is essential for planning your withdrawals, conversions, and Social Security timing. The interaction between state and federal taxes determines your true after-tax income each year.
What's taxed and what's not
Fully exempt from state income tax.
Fully taxable as ordinary income.
Fully taxable as ordinary income.
Qualified distributions are fully exempt at both the state and federal level.
Tax rate
Michigan has a flat income tax rate of 4.25%. All taxable income above the standard deduction is taxed at this single rate. The standard deduction is $5,800 for single filers and $11,600 for married filing jointly.
A flat rate simplifies planning: there are no brackets to manage. Every additional dollar of retirement income is taxed at 4.25% regardless of how much you withdraw. The planning focus shifts to maximizing deductions and exemptions rather than staying within bracket thresholds.
All taxable income above the standard deduction is taxed at this rate. No brackets to manage.
$5,800 single / $11,600 married filing jointly. Income below this threshold is tax-free.
Strategies to reduce your tax burden
Michigan's flat 4.25% rate means Roth conversions can avoid state tax on future withdrawals. The SS exemption is a strong advantage for retirees. Federal tax planning (withdrawal sequencing and SS timing) drives the primary savings opportunity.
Roth conversions before retirement. Converting traditional IRA balances to Roth during lower-income years means paying Michigan tax now at lower rates, then taking tax-free Roth withdrawals later. See the full Roth conversion strategy guide.
Withdrawal sequencing. The order you draw from different accounts each year matters. Drawing from taxable brokerage accounts before tapping tax-deferred accounts can keep your Michigan ordinary income lower. Read more in the tax-efficient withdrawal sequence.
Social Security timing. Optimizing when you claim Social Security affects both your federal and state tax picture. See the Social Security timing decision.
Modeling your retirement taxes
The interaction between Michigan's tax rules and federal taxes is too complex to estimate by hand. A year-by-year projection shows your actual tax burden for every year of retirement.
Drawdown Arc's projection engine includes Michigan's flat rate, standard deduction, and retirement income exemptions. Set your state to Michigan and enter your account balances, pension, and Social Security timing: the projection shows your Michigan state tax alongside federal tax for every year.
State tax modeling is a Pro feature. The free calculator shows your full federal tax projection: upgrade to Pro to add Michigan (or any of the 50 states + DC) to your model.