Rental Investment Guide

Fruitport


Short-term & long-term rental regulations, fees, and investor resources for Muskegon County, Michigan.

Updated May 2026

Area Overview


The Village of Fruitport is a small lakefront community of roughly 1,100 residents on the south shore of Spring Lake in Muskegon County, immediately adjacent to (and separate from) Fruitport Charter Township.[1] The Village is best known for Pomona Park, its boat launch, and Old Fashioned Days held each Memorial Day weekend, which together generate seasonal visitor demand that some owners try to capture through short-term rental platforms.[2]

Day-to-day land use in the Village is governed by the Land Use Zoning Ordinance adopted November 18, 2019 and updated through 2024, with permitting handled in-house by the Zoning Administrator (Roger Vanderstelt) and building inspections contracted out to Michigan Township Services.[3][4] The Village does NOT currently operate a stand-alone short-term rental ordinance or a stand-alone rental-property registration program, so anything described in this guide as an STR or LTR rule is grounded in the underlying zoning categories, the state landlord-tenant act, and the Muskegon County accommodations tax rather than a dedicated Village rental code.[5]

Because the Village is so small and rules are not codified in a dedicated rental chapter, parcel-level verification with the Zoning Administrator is essential before closing on or marketing a property as a rental. The honest short version: long-term rental is straightforward in residential districts; short-term rental is a gray area and should be confirmed in writing before you list.

Quick Status Summary


Short-Term Rentals UNVERIFIED

The Village has no dedicated short-term rental ordinance and no STR registration program. The 2019 Zoning Ordinance defines a Dwelling as occupied ‘permanently or transiently’ and separately defines Bed & Breakfast Establishments, but does not define or expressly permit modern short-term rentals. Treat as parcel-by-parcel โ€” confirm in writing with the Zoning Administrator before listing.[3][5]

Long-Term Rentals ALLOWED

Long-term residential rental is allowed in the Village’s residential districts under the standard single-family, two-family, and multiple-family dwelling categories defined in the Zoning Ordinance. The Village does not operate a separate landlord registration or annual inspection program โ€” state law (Michigan Landlord-Tenant Act, Truth in Renting Act) is the controlling layer.[3][6]

Rental Regulations


๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Where STRs Are Allowed (Zoning)

The Village of Fruitport’s 2019 Zoning Ordinance does not use the term “short-term rental” anywhere in the code.[3] The closest analogues are two definitions in Chapter 2:

  • Dwelling โ€” a building used as the home, residence, or sleeping place of one family “either permanently or transiently,” which arguably encompasses short-stay residential use of a normally-zoned dwelling.[3]
  • Bed & Breakfast Establishment โ€” a separately-defined use within a detached single dwelling where transient guests are provided a sleeping room, breakfast, and bath access for payment.[3] Where B&Bs are allowed (and on what terms) is a question only the Zoning Administrator can answer for a specific parcel.

Because the Village has not formally classified whole-house short-term rental as either a permitted residential use or a separate commercial accommodation use, the practical answer is: do not assume STR is allowed on any specific parcel without a written zoning determination from the Village. The Zoning Administrator is Roger Vanderstelt.[4]

๐Ÿ“ Registration & Permit Process

There is currently no Village of Fruitport short-term rental registration or licensing program โ€” neither a dedicated STR portal nor a paper application appears in the Village’s Forms, Ordinances & Documents catalog.[7] An owner who is determined to operate an STR in the Village will typically need to:

  1. Email the Zoning Administrator (roger@fruitportvillage.org) describing the proposed use and request a written zoning determination.[4]
  2. If the use is determined to require a Special Land Use approval or a Bed & Breakfast classification, file the corresponding application with the Planning Commission and pay the published fee.[8]
  3. Obtain any building or change-of-use permits through Michigan Township Services, the Village’s contracted building department, at 231-865-6977 or 231-865-3310.[4]
  4. Register with the Michigan Department of Treasury for the 6% Use Tax on accommodations under 30 days[9] and with the Muskegon County Treasurer for the 5% county accommodations excise tax under Public Act 263 of 1974.[10]

If you list on Airbnb or Vrbo without confirming the zoning question first, you are taking on personal enforcement risk โ€” please do not skip step 1.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Fees & Penalties

The Village publishes no STR-specific permit fee or STR-specific civil-infraction penalty schedule because no STR ordinance exists.[5][7] The fees that do apply to an STR-style operation in the Village are external to the rental itself:

  • Michigan Use Tax on accommodations โ€” 6% of the rental charge for stays under 30 consecutive days, remitted to the Michigan Department of Treasury.[9]
  • Muskegon County Accommodations Tax โ€” 5% of the total charge for transient lodging (stay under 30 consecutive days), remitted to the County Treasurer; one-fifth of the proceeds is appropriated to the Convention & Visitors Bureau.[10]
  • Zoning permit and Planning Commission fees โ€” set on the Village fee schedule and payable at the time of any required application or determination.[8]
  • Zoning enforcement โ€” violations of the Zoning Ordinance are enforced through municipal civil infraction procedure with daily-recurring fines as described in Michigan’s Zoning Enabling Act, MCL 125.3801โ€“125.3802.[3]
๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Inspections & Safety Requirements

The Village contracts building permitting and inspections to Michigan Township Services, which performs all Michigan Building Code, Mechanical Code, Electrical Code, and Plumbing Code inspections on behalf of the Village.[4] An STR-style use that involves any change of occupancy, finished basement bedroom, deck, dock work, or new sleeping area will trigger a building permit through Michigan Township Services after the underlying Village zoning permit is issued.

The Village does not conduct routine rental safety inspections of its own, because there is no rental registration ordinance to authorize them.[7] Owners are nonetheless bound by Michigan’s housing law (MCL 125.401 et seq.) for smoke detectors, egress windows, GFCI protection in kitchens and baths, and working heating systems regardless of whether the Village ever inspects the property.

For properties on septic, plan for a Muskegon County Public Health Existing System Evaluation before closing or before any rental conversion โ€” this is the cleanest way to confirm tank size, drain-field condition, and a system that is adequate for an expected occupancy load.[11]

โš™๏ธ Operating Rules: Taxes, Parking & Nuisance

Even though the Village does not have a dedicated STR ordinance, four operating layers still apply to any short-stay rental inside the Village limits:

  1. Tax remittance. Combined 6% Michigan Use Tax + 5% Muskegon County accommodations tax on every rental under 30 days.[9][10] Airbnb and Vrbo collect Michigan Use Tax automatically in most cases, but operators are responsible for the county tax and for direct-booking guests where the platform does not collect.
  2. Parking. All occupant vehicles must be parked on-site per the residential-district parking requirements in Chapter 7 of the Zoning Ordinance; no overnight parking is permitted on Village streets where prohibited by signage, and snow-route parking restrictions apply November through April per the published DPW Snow Plow Plan.[4]
  3. Refuse and waste. The Village publishes a Household Waste page outlining curbside pickup days and bulk-pickup rules โ€” STR operators are responsible for ensuring guests follow the schedule.[2]
  4. Noise & nuisance. General nuisance and noise provisions in the Village Code of Ordinances apply, with enforcement through the County Sheriff or the Zoning Administrator.[5] No quiet-hours schedule is set specifically for STRs because no STR ordinance exists.
๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Where LTRs Are Allowed (Zoning)

Long-term rental is allowed across the Village’s residential districts because the Zoning Ordinance treats it as a normal residential occupancy of the underlying Dwelling use, with three formally-defined dwelling types:[3]

  • Single-Family Dwelling (Detached) โ€” a detached building used by one family.
  • Two-Family Dwelling โ€” a detached building designed for two families living independently, sometimes called a duplex.
  • Multiple-Family Dwelling โ€” a building used by three or more families living independently, including apartment houses.

Which of these types are permitted on a particular parcel depends on the underlying zoning district โ€” confirm the district from the official Zoning Districts Map and read Chapter 7 of the Zoning Ordinance for the Table of Uses, or email the Zoning Administrator with the parcel address.[3][4]

๐Ÿ“ Registration & Permit Process

The Village of Fruitport does not operate a long-term-rental registration program. There is no annual landlord license, no rental dwelling permit, and no LTR application form in the Village’s Forms, Ordinances & Documents catalog.[7] A landlord acquiring a property and converting it to a long-term rental is not required to file anything additional with the Village beyond the normal transfer-of-ownership paperwork the Treasurer handles for tax purposes.

What is required when the unit changes physically โ€” adding a bedroom, finishing a basement, installing a new furnace, building a deck โ€” is a building permit through Michigan Township Services after first obtaining the underlying Village zoning permit.[4] If you are converting a single-family home into a duplex or adding an accessory dwelling unit, that is a zoning question, not just a building question, so start with the Zoning Administrator.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Fees & Penalties

Because there is no Village rental registration, there is no annual landlord license fee in the Village of Fruitport.[7] The fees a long-term-rental owner will actually face are:

  • Annual property tax โ€” billed by the Village Treasurer with summer and winter installments, payable online or at 45 N 2nd Ave.[2]
  • Zoning Permit fees for any work needing a Village zoning permit (set on the Village fee schedule).[8]
  • Building permit fees for any work needing a Michigan Township Services permit (set on the MTS fee schedule).[4]
  • Statutory damages for landlord violations of the Michigan Truth in Renting Act (MCL 554.631 et seq.) and the Landlord-Tenant Act (MCL 554.601 et seq.) โ€” these are enforced by tenants, not by the Village.[6]
๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Inspections & Safety Requirements

The Village of Fruitport does not perform recurring rental inspections, but the property must still meet the substantive standards of the Michigan Building Code as enforced by Michigan Township Services at permit-issuance time, and the Michigan Housing Law (MCL 125.401 et seq.) at all times.[4][6] Practical baseline:

  • Working hard-wired or 10-year sealed smoke detectors on every level and inside each sleeping room.
  • Carbon monoxide detector outside each sleeping area when fuel-burning appliances or an attached garage are present.
  • Egress window in every basement bedroom โ€” basement bedrooms without a code-compliant egress window cannot legally be advertised as bedrooms.
  • GFCI protection in kitchens, bathrooms, garages, and outdoor receptacles.
  • Working heat capable of maintaining 68ยฐF in habitable rooms during the heating season.

For septic-served properties, an Existing System Evaluation through Muskegon County Public Health is the responsible move before listing a rental โ€” it documents tank size, drain-field condition, and rated occupancy.[11]

โš–๏ธ Tenant Rights & Eviction Resources

Because the Village does not regulate landlord-tenant relationships through its own code, the controlling layer is Michigan state law:[6]

  • Truth in Renting Act (MCL 554.631โ€“641) โ€” requires written leases for terms over one year and prohibits certain unfair lease clauses.
  • Landlord-Tenant Relationships Act (MCL 554.601โ€“616) โ€” security deposit caps (1.5x monthly rent), 30-day return deadline, and inventory-checklist requirement.
  • Anti-Lockout / Self-Help Eviction Statute (MCL 600.2918) โ€” landlords cannot change locks, shut off utilities, or remove belongings; eviction must run through the 60th District Court in Muskegon County.
  • Fair Housing โ€” federal Fair Housing Act (42 USC 3601 et seq.) and the Michigan Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act prohibit discrimination on protected classes including familial status, race, religion, national origin, sex, age, marital status, height, weight, and disability.

Tenants needing help can call Legal Aid of Western Michigan or check Michigan Legal Help (michiganlegalhelp.org) โ€” both serve Muskegon County.

Official Resources


Property Tax Treatment


i
Important for investors: A property used as a rental in Michigan is generally classified as non-homestead, which is taxed at the full local millage rate (no Principal Residence Exemption). Short-term rental income may also be subject to the Michigan Use Tax on transient accommodations. Consult a CPA before underwriting any deal โ€” these are not opinions, they are starting points for your own tax research.

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Buying, selling, or investing in Fruitport Village?

I help investors and homeowners navigate short-term and long-term rental rules across Muskegon County and the rest of southwest Michigan, including small villages like Fruitport where the rules are not in a tidy ordinance but live with the Zoning Administrator.

Sources & Downloads


  1. 1
    Village of Fruitport โ€” Departments https://www.fruitportvillage.com/departments/
    Official Village staff directory: Clerk, Treasurer, DPW, Zoning Administrator, Village President. Building permit functions contracted to Michigan Township Services at 231-865-6977 / 231-865-3310.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  2. 2
    Village of Fruitport โ€” Homepage and Community Pages https://www.fruitportvillage.com/
    Village identity, Pomona Park / boat launch / kayak launch / Old Fashioned Days community context.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  3. 3
    Village of Fruitport Land Use Zoning Ordinance (Adopted Nov 18, 2019; latest revision Aug 2024) https://www.fruitportvillage.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Village-of-Fruitport-Zoning-Ordinance-Adopted-December-2019.pdf
    Defines Dwelling (permanent or transient occupancy) and Bed & Breakfast Establishment as separate uses; does not define 'short-term rental'. Chapter 7 governs residential districts including single-family, two-family, multiple-family dwellings.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  4. 4
    Village of Fruitport โ€” Contact https://www.fruitportvillage.com/contact/
    Office phone 231-865-3577, email office@fruitportvillage.org, address 45 N 2nd Ave, Fruitport, MI 49415.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  5. 5
    Codified Village ordinances. As of the Oct 2025 edition reviewed for this guide, no dedicated short-term rental or rental registration chapter is published.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  6. 6
    Michigan Compiled Laws โ€” Landlord-Tenant Act (MCL 554.601 et seq.) and Truth in Renting Act (MCL 554.631 et seq.) https://www.legislature.mi.gov/Laws/MCL?objectName=mcl-Act-348-of-1972
    Statewide tenant rights, security deposit caps, eviction procedure. Applies to all Michigan rentals where no preempting local ordinance exists.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  7. 7
    Village of Fruitport โ€” Forms, Ordinances & Documents https://www.fruitportvillage.com/forms-and-docs/
    Authoritative Village forms catalog. No STR or rental-registration application is listed as of May 2026.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  8. 8
    Official Land Use Ordinance Zoning Map approved Nov 18, 2019 and updated Jan 21, 2020.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  9. 9
    Michigan Department of Treasury โ€” Use Tax https://www.michigan.gov/taxes/business-taxes/sales-use-tax/use-tax-1
    6% state Use Tax applies to room/lodging rentals under 30 consecutive days.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  10. 10
    Michigan PA 263 of 1974 โ€” Excise Tax on the Business of Providing Accommodations https://www.legislature.mi.gov/documents/mcl/pdf/mcl-Act-263-of-1974.pdf
    State authority for Muskegon County's 5% accommodations tax on transient lodging under 30 consecutive days; one-fifth of proceeds appropriated to the Convention & Visitors Bureau.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  11. 11
    Muskegon County โ€” Septic Permits & Evaluations https://co.muskegon.mi.us/1042/Septic-Permits-Evaluations
    Muskegon County Public Health onsite-wastewater program. Existing System Evaluations available for buyers and rental converters; Environmental Health 231-724-6208.
    Verified: 2026-05-16
How this guide is produced. This rental guide is researched and drafted with assistance from Claude, an AI model made by Anthropic, working from the official municipal sources linked in this page. AI can make mistakes โ€” any fact that would materially affect a purchase or rental decision should be verified against the official source cited above and confirmed directly with the municipality. See an error? Email a correction.