A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Clinton County, Michigan
Clinton County is one of Michigan’s most economically healthy mid-size counties — a place where state government employment, Michigan State University spillover, and a growing professional class have produced household incomes, housing values, and quality of life indicators that consistently outperform Michigan averages. It is also one of the state’s most challenging rental markets for a specific reason: with 82.8% of occupied housing units owner-occupied, the rental stock is thin relative to demand, and quality properties rent quickly when they become available. Landlords who own and maintain good rental properties in Clinton County are in an unusually strong position; the question is almost never finding a tenant, but choosing the best qualified tenant from among the applicants who appear.
DeWitt Township: The County’s Suburban Core
DeWitt Township, immediately north of Lansing and East Lansing, is the county’s dominant rental sub-market. The township has grown steadily for decades as Lansing metro households sought lower density, better school systems, and suburban environments within commuting distance of state government jobs, MSU, and the Lansing area’s healthcare and private sector employers. The rental properties that exist in DeWitt Township tend to be newer, better-maintained, and command higher rents than properties in St. Johns or the county’s agricultural townships. Demand is driven by young professionals, state employees, and dual-income households who are not yet ready to buy or who prefer rental flexibility while establishing themselves in the area.
Bath Township, just east of DeWitt, is another growing community whose proximity to East Lansing and MSU creates specific rental demand. Faculty, graduate students, and MSU-affiliated professionals who want suburban surroundings without living in Ingham County make up a portion of Bath Township’s rental applicant pool. These tenants typically have strong documented incomes — university salaries and research stipends are straightforward to verify — and tend to be good long-term tenants when properly selected.
St. Johns and the Agricultural County Interior
St. Johns, the county seat, functions as a genuine small-city center with its own identity separate from the Lansing metro. Home to about 8,000 residents, the city has a historic downtown, a local hospital (Sparrow Clinton Hospital), and a community character built around the county’s agricultural and food processing heritage — the city’s sugar beet processing history has given way to more diversified employment, but the agricultural economy of the surrounding county (Clinton County is one of Michigan’s more productive agricultural counties, with beans, corn, and sugar beets among the major crops) still shapes the area’s economy and seasonal employment patterns. The rental market in St. Johns is more affordable than DeWitt but is also thinner in terms of available units, with relatively modest turnover.
The county’s smaller communities — Ovid, Elsie, Fowler, Laingsburg — have very thin rental markets concentrated in single-family homes and the occasional small multi-family building. These communities suit landlords who own a single property near where they live and want to manage it themselves, but they are not markets where portfolio investment makes economic sense without also having operations in the larger communities.
The 65-A District Court
The 65-A District Court at 100 E. State Street, Suite 3400 in St. Johns handles all eviction proceedings for Clinton County. The court is a single-county district court with a manageable caseload. Evictions in Clinton County are relatively uncommon compared to more urban Michigan counties — the county’s higher incomes, stronger tenant screening environments, and lower poverty rates produce fewer nonpayment situations than markets like Calhoun or Genesee. When evictions do occur, the standard Michigan summary proceedings apply without local modification: 7-day demand, filing and summons, hearing, judgment, 10-day writ delay. Physical evictions within ten days of the writ’s execution are arranged by the plaintiff; the court officer or sheriff’s deputy keeps the peace but does not arrange moving logistics.
Security Deposit and Market Rate Considerations
At median Clinton County rents around $1,000 per month — and considerably higher in the DeWitt corridor — maximum deposits run to $1,500 or more. The standard Michigan 30-day return or itemized damage list requirement, the 14-day written deposit location notice, and the double-damages exposure for noncompliance (MCL 554.613) all apply. In a county where the rental applicant pool is generally well-qualified and rental agreements tend to run smoothly, security deposit procedures still need to be handled with the same discipline as in higher-friction markets. The stakes are higher in absolute terms precisely because rents and deposits are higher: a landlord who forfeits a $1,500 security deposit claim through a missed 30-day deadline has lost more than in a lower-rent market.
Clinton County’s combination of Lansing metro proximity, high household incomes, excellent school districts, low crime, and simple state-law regulatory environment makes it one of the most landlord-favorable markets in mid-Michigan for investors who are patient enough to wait for a well-qualified tenant in a market that does not always have long tenant queues, but who benefit enormously from the quality and stability of the tenants who do appear.
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