A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Genesee County, Michigan
Genesee County is one of the most consequential and complex rental markets in Michigan — a county of 406,000 people that contains two economically and demographically distinct realities within a single geographic boundary. Flint, the county seat, is a major American city with a long industrial heritage, a deep and unresolved post-industrial transition, and the lasting legacy of the water crisis that made it a national symbol of infrastructure failure and governmental accountability. The outlying county — Burton, Grand Blanc, Flushing, Davison, Fenton, Swartz Creek — is a functioning mid-Michigan suburban and small-city economy with professional workers, healthcare employment, and housing costs that track the broader mid-Michigan market. Landlords in Genesee County are effectively operating in two different markets governed by one legal system, and understanding the distinction is essential to making sound investment and management decisions.
Flint City: A Market of Opportunity and Complexity
Flint was the birthplace of General Motors and, at its mid-century peak, one of the most prosperous industrial cities in the United States. The long decline of domestic auto manufacturing, the population loss that followed (Flint’s population fell from over 190,000 at its peak to around 81,000 by 2020), and the Flint water crisis of 2014–2019 — in which lead contamination of the city’s water supply exposed thousands of residents to serious health risks — created conditions that have made Flint one of Michigan’s most challenging urban markets. Property values in Flint are among the lowest in Michigan, and rents are significantly below the county median. Section 8 (Housing Choice Voucher) utilization is substantial. The tenant population is economically stressed, and the city’s housing stock is old — over 11% of Genesee County homes were built before 1940, with Flint’s share considerably higher.
For landlords, Flint city offers very low acquisition costs and rent yields that can be compelling on paper. The operational realities are more demanding than a simple yield calculation suggests. The city’s Flint Housing Commission and Community and Economic Development Department have maintained rental property registration and inspection programs. Flint landlords who own non-registered or non-compliant properties face complications in eviction proceedings, as courts may require proof of compliance. The water crisis legacy makes plumbing fixture disclosure and any infrastructure concerns particularly sensitive. Lead paint disclosure is universally required in a city where essentially all rental housing is pre-1978 and significant pre-1940 stock exists. Self-help eviction is strictly prohibited (MCL 600.2918, treble damages), and Flint’s legal aid organizations — including the Genesee County Legal Aid and Michigan Legal Help network — are active in protecting tenant rights.
The 67th District Court: Seven Divisions, One County
Genesee County’s eviction proceedings run through the 67th District Court, which operates seven divisions across the county. The former 68th District Court, which previously handled Flint city cases, merged into the 67th District Court on January 2, 2016, and Flint city cases are now handled at the 5th Division (67-5) at 630 S. Saginaw Street, Flint — the same McCree Courts and Human Services Building that houses the Genesee County Prosecutor’s criminal division. The 67th District Court does not accept personal checks at any division. Bring cash, money order, or credit/debit card with ID.
The seven divisions and their locations are: 1st Division (Flushing, relocated to 630 S. Saginaw as of December 4, 2025); 2nd Division A (Davison); 2nd Division B (Burton); 3rd Division (Mt. Morris, also relocated to 630 S. Saginaw as of December 4, 2025); 4th Division A (Fenton); 4th Division B (Grand Blanc); and 5th Division (Flint city, 630 S. Saginaw). Landlords must file at the division serving the city or township where the rental property is located. Filing at the wrong division is a correctable error but wastes time. Confirm the correct venue at 67thdc.com or by calling the court before filing.
The Outcounty Sub-Markets
Burton, with about 30,000 residents immediately southeast of Flint, is Genesee County’s most active suburban rental market. Grand Blanc, to the south, is an affluent suburban community with newer housing stock, strong school reputation, and professional residents who commute to Flint-area healthcare, automotive, and professional services employers. Flushing, northwest of Flint, and Davison, to the east, are mid-sized communities with stable year-round rental demand and a tenant pool oriented toward working families and professionals. Fenton, at the county’s southern end near the Livingston County border, serves a different market — partially drawing from the Livingston County professional base and partially from Flint metro workers who prefer southern Genesee County’s slightly lower costs. Swartz Creek sits in the western part of the county along the river of the same name.
The University of Michigan–Flint, Kettering University, and Mott Community College together enroll over 20,000 students and create genuine rental demand near their respective campuses in and adjacent to Flint. Healthcare employment at Hurley Medical Center and McLaren Flint adds professional tenants whose incomes are more stable than the general post-industrial Flint economy would suggest. For landlords willing to engage with Flint city’s operational complexity, the combination of low acquisition costs, healthcare and university employment anchors, and significant Section 8 demand creates a viable investment case with patient, informed management.
Source-of-Income Law and Fair Housing
Michigan’s 2025 source-of-income non-discrimination law (MCL 554.601c) has particular relevance in Genesee County. Landlords with five or more units statewide may not refuse to rent to otherwise-qualified applicants solely because they hold a Housing Choice Voucher. In Flint city, where Section 8 utilization is among the highest in mid-Michigan, this law substantially affects tenant pool management for qualifying landlords. The civil remedy for violations is up to three times monthly rent plus attorney fees (MCL 554.601d). Flint’s demographic profile — approximately 54% Black residents countywide with much higher concentrations in Flint city — means fair housing compliance extends well beyond Section 8 to race, national origin, and disability-related accommodations. Landlords in Genesee County should ensure their screening criteria are uniformly applied and documented.
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