Rental Investment Guide

Leonidas Township


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

Updated May 2026

Area Overview


Leonidas Township is a rural township in northeastern St. Joseph County, Michigan, bordered to the north by Kalamazoo County and bisected by the St. Joseph River and Nottawa Creek.[1] The township contains parts of Leidy Lake and Havens Lake, and its development pattern is dominated by farmland, river-frontage parcels, and small lakefront cottages rather than dense residential subdivisions.[2]

Like most rural St. Joseph County townships, Leonidas Township has not adopted a short-term rental ordinance or a township-level rental registration program.[2] Rental activity is governed by the underlying 2010 Leonidas Township Zoning Ordinance, the Michigan Construction Code (administered through state-licensed inspectors), Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency rules for private septic systems, and state landlord-tenant law (PA 348 of 1972 and the Truth in Renting Act).[2][5][6][8][9]

Because there is no STR registration desk and no annual rental inspection program here, the practical compliance burden falls on three places: the parcel’s zoning district under the 2010 ordinance, septic capacity for lake and river frontage homes, and state-law obligations on every written lease.[2][6][8] Before listing or leasing a Leonidas Township property, verify the parcel’s zoning district through the St. Joseph County FetchGIS Parcel Viewer and confirm permitted uses in writing with the Zoning Administrator.[7]

Quick Status Summary


Short-Term Rentals ALLOWED

No township short-term rental ordinance exists. STR use defaults to the underlying zoning district under the 2010 Leonidas Township Zoning Ordinance. Bed-and-breakfast operations with six or fewer bedrooms are explicitly listed as a Special Use in the A-1 Agricultural District. STR operators must still comply with the Michigan Construction Code, the township ordinance penalty provisions, and state lodging tax obligations.

Long-Term Rentals ALLOWED

Leonidas Township does not run a rental registration or inspection program. Long-term rentals operate under the underlying 2010 Zoning Ordinance and Michigan landlord-tenant law (PA 348 of 1972 and the Truth in Renting Act of 1978). Eviction proceedings are heard in the St. Joseph County 3B District Court Civil Division in Centreville.

Rental Regulations


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

Short-term rentals are governed by the parcel’s underlying zoning district under the 2010 Leonidas Township Zoning Ordinance, which divides the township into seven districts: A-1 Agricultural, R-1 Residential (single-family), R-2 Residential (single and two-family), R-4 Manufactured Housing Parks, C Commercial, I Industrial, and R/C Recreation/Conservation.[2] The ordinance does not call out short-term or vacation rentals as a separate use class, so STR operation is treated as residential use of the dwelling unit within whichever district the parcel sits in.

One use type is called out specifically: a Bed and Breakfast facility with no more than six bedrooms is listed as a Special Use in the A-1 Agricultural District, requiring Planning Commission site-plan review and a public hearing under Article VI.[2] B&B operations in any other district would require a use variance or text amendment.

For any specific property, verify the parcel’s district using the St. Joseph County FetchGIS Parcel Viewer and confirm STR compatibility in writing with the Zoning Administrator before listing.[7]

๐Ÿ“ Registration & Permit Process

There is no township-level short-term rental registration, permit, or license required in Leonidas Township as of May 2026.[2] No application form, no annual fee, and no rental-specific inspection has been adopted by the Township Board. Zoning permits are required only when the use itself requires Special Use approval (for example, opening a bed and breakfast in the A-1 Agricultural District), not for normal residential rental use of an existing dwelling.[2]

Operators are still responsible for state-level obligations: collecting and remitting Michigan’s 6% Use Tax on rentals shorter than 30 days, complying with the Michigan Construction Code when work requires a building permit, and following the Truth in Renting Act for any written rental agreement.[8] If your property uses a private septic system (which most rural and lakefront Leonidas Township properties do), a system evaluation through the Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency is appropriate before stepping up bed count for high-occupancy STR use.[6]

๐Ÿ’ต Fees & Penalties

There is no STR-specific fee in Leonidas Township because no registration program exists.[2] The only direct dollar exposure is the general zoning ordinance penalty: under Article X, any building, structure, or use of land that violates the ordinance is declared a nuisance per se and the violator may be fined up to $500.00 plus costs of prosecution, imprisoned up to 90 days in the county jail, or both, in the discretion of the court.[3] Each day a violation continues may be charged as a separate offense.

Site-plan review and Special Use applications (for example, a Bed and Breakfast in A-1) trigger Planning Commission review fees plus the cost of any professional review (architect, planner, or engineer) that the Township retains, which is passed through to the applicant before a zoning permit is issued.[2] Contact the Township Hall before filing to confirm the current application fee schedule.

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Inspections & Safety Requirements

There is no recurring rental inspection in Leonidas Township.[2] Construction, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing work on STR properties is regulated through the Michigan Construction Code and is triggered only when the scope of work requires a permit (additions, structural changes, new bedrooms, deck rebuilds, finished basements with sleeping areas, etc.). Building, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing permits in rural St. Joseph County jurisdictions without a township building department flow through the Michigan LARA Bureau of Construction Codes.

Septic system condition is the most common practical issue for Leonidas Township STR operators because nearly all parcels in the township rely on private on-site sewage disposal. Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency issues septic permits, performs perk tests, and inspects systems at the time of property sale or major modification.[6] If you are buying a Leidy Lake, Havens Lake, or St. Joseph River parcel to operate as an STR with higher bed counts than the prior owner, a pre-purchase septic evaluation is a cheap way to avoid a six-figure replacement surprise.

๐Ÿ“ฃ Operating Rules (Noise, Nuisance, Property Condition)

Leonidas Township does not publish STR-specific occupancy caps, parking limits, or quiet-hour rules in ordinance.[2] Nuisance enforcement runs through the zoning ordinance itself, which declares any use of land that violates the ordinance to be a ‘nuisance per se’ subject to abatement, injunction, and fines.[3] In practice, complaint-driven enforcement for noise, large gatherings, and property-condition issues is handled by the St. Joseph County Sheriff’s Office (non-emergency 269-467-9045) and the Zoning Administrator.[1][11]

Although there is no ordinance requirement for a 24-hour local contact person, providing one to neighbors and posting it inside the unit remains a strong practice for any rural Leonidas Township STR. Bed and Breakfast operations licensed as a Special Use in A-1 are explicitly limited by ordinance to overnight stays of no more than 14 consecutive days per guest.[2]

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Bed & Breakfast Special Use (A-1 Agricultural)

Bed and Breakfast operations are the one rental-adjacent use the 2010 ordinance addresses explicitly. A Bed and Breakfast facility with no more than six bedrooms is listed as a Special Use in the A-1 Agricultural District, requiring Planning Commission site-plan review, a public hearing, and any conditions the Planning Commission imposes under Article VI Supplemental Regulations.[2] The ordinance defines a Bed-N-Breakfast Inn as a dwelling in which overnight accommodations are provided to transient guests for compensation by the resident owners and limits guest stays to no more than 14 consecutive days.[2]

If you are considering an A-1 parcel for an inn-style or larger-occupancy short-term rental, the Special Use route is the legitimate compliance path. Prepare a site plan addressing parking, septic capacity, and on-site signage, then schedule a Planning Commission hearing through the Township Clerk. Outside of A-1, a B&B with that scale would generally require either a use variance from the Zoning Board of Appeals or a text amendment to the zoning ordinance.[2]

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

Long-term rentals are governed by the parcel’s underlying zoning district under the 2010 Leonidas Township Zoning Ordinance.[2] Single-family dwellings are permitted in the A-1 Agricultural, R-1 Residential, and R-2 Residential districts; two-family dwellings (duplexes) are permitted in R-2.[2] Manufactured housing parks are regulated under the R-4 MHP District. The R/C Recreation/Conservation District is principally for conservation, farming, and roadways rather than residential rental development.

State-licensed adult foster care and similar residential facilities of six or fewer residents are also permitted use in A-1, R-1, and R-2, consistent with Michigan’s preemption rules for state-licensed adult foster care homes.[2] For any specific property, verify the parcel’s zoning district using the St. Joseph County FetchGIS Parcel Viewer and confirm LTR compatibility (including any nonconforming-use questions for older lake cottages) in writing with the Zoning Administrator before signing a lease.[7]

๐Ÿ“ Registration & Permit Process

No registration is required. Leonidas Township does not run a rental registration program, does not issue annual rental licenses, and does not conduct routine rental inspections.[2] This is the typical pattern for rural St. Joseph County townships and the opposite pattern from the county’s cities (Sturgis, Three Rivers, St. Joseph), which do operate rental licensing programs.

Landlords still need to comply with the Michigan Truth in Renting Act of 1978 (every written lease must include the prescribed statutory notice in 12-point type) and PA 348 of 1972 (security deposit cap of one and a half months, separate escrow account, 30-day move-out accounting, eviction-process requirements).[8][9] If construction work on the rental property triggers a permit, the Michigan Construction Code applies through the Michigan LARA Bureau of Construction Codes.

๐Ÿ’ต Fees & Penalties

There is no rental-specific fee in Leonidas Township because no registration or inspection program exists.[2] Zoning enforcement against an LTR property would proceed under Article X of the zoning ordinance: up to $500.00 plus costs of prosecution, up to 90 days in the county jail, or both per offense, with each day of continuing violation chargeable as a separate offense.[3]

State-law penalties on the landlord side are typically more financially significant for ordinary LTR disputes than the township ordinance. PA 348 of 1972 entitles a tenant to double damages plus reasonable attorney fees if a landlord fails to return a security deposit or provide the required 30-day itemized accounting after move-out, and noncompliant lease clauses under the Truth in Renting Act can be voided in their entirety.[8][9]

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Inspections & Safety Requirements

There is no recurring township inspection for LTR units in Leonidas Township.[2] Code enforcement is complaint-driven through the zoning ordinance’s nuisance-per-se framework and the Michigan Construction Code, which only applies when permitted work is being performed.[3] Building, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing inspections in rural St. Joseph County jurisdictions without a local building department flow through the Michigan LARA Bureau of Construction Codes and its state-licensed inspectors.

For LTR properties served by private septic, system condition is the landlord’s responsibility under standard habitability obligations. The Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency keeps records of permitted septic systems and inspects at point of sale or major modification.[6] Smoke and carbon monoxide alarm requirements track the Michigan Residential Code rather than a separate township rule, so a working smoke alarm on every floor and outside each sleeping area is the practical baseline.

โš–๏ธ Tenant Rights & Eviction Resources

Eviction cases for Leonidas Township rental properties are heard at the St. Joseph County 3B District Court Civil Division in Centreville, which handles landlord-tenant summary proceedings, small claims up to $7,000, and civil suits up to $25,000.[10] After a 7-Day Notice to Quit for nonpayment of rent (or a 30-Day Notice for other lease violations), a landlord may file a summary proceedings complaint at 3B District Court; the court typically schedules a hearing within two to three weeks of filing.

Tenants in Leonidas Township are covered by the Michigan Truth in Renting Act (statutory notice required in every written lease), PA 348 of 1972 (one-and-a-half-month security deposit cap, escrow account, 30-day accounting, written move-out notice), and the prohibition on self-help eviction (only a court order plus a sheriff or court officer can remove a tenant).[8][9] Tenants facing eviction can seek assistance from Legal Services of South Central Michigan, which covers St. Joseph 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 Leonidas Township?

Lakefront cottages on Leidy or Havens, river-frontage homes on the St. Joseph River, and rural A-1 parcels each pencil out very differently as rentals. I help investors and homeowners read parcel-level zoning, septic capacity, and the right operating model before you commit.

Sources & Downloads


  1. 1
    Leonidas Township โ€” Home https://www.leonidastwp.gov/
    Official township site; menus for Government, Boards, Document Library, Contact, and Directory
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  2. 2
    Leonidas Township โ€” Zoning Administrator page https://www.leonidastwp.gov/government/zoning-administrator/
    Lists zoning ordinance link and GIS map link; Zoning Administrator Barry MacDonald, (269) 496-7837
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  3. 3
    Leonidas Township 2010 Zoning Ordinance (PDF) https://www.leonidastwp.gov/download/13695/zoning-ordinance.pdf
    Districts, Special Uses (incl. Bed-and-Breakfast), Article VI site plan review, Article X penalties
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  4. 4
    Leonidas Township โ€” Contact Us https://www.leonidastwp.gov/contact-us/
    Township Hall 53312 Fulton Rd, Leonidas, MI 49066; mailing PO Box 145; phone (269) 496-7837
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  5. 5
    Leonidas Township โ€” Township Directory https://www.leonidastwp.gov/township-directory/
    Supervisor Bernard Saxman, Clerk Julie Censke, Treasurer/Zoning Admin Barry MacDonald, Fire Chief Marshall Saylor
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  6. 6
    Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency โ€” Sewage Disposal Systems https://www.bhsj.org/programs/36
    Septic permits, perk tests, system records for St. Joseph County
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  7. 7
    FetchGIS โ€” St. Joseph County Parcel Viewer https://app.fetchgis.com/?currentMap=stjo
    Free public parcel viewer with zoning overlays for St. Joseph County
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  8. 8
    Required lease notice; prohibited lease provisions
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  9. 9
    Michigan PA 348 of 1972 โ€” Landlord and Tenant Relationships https://www.legislature.mi.gov/Laws/MCL?objectName=MCL-ACT-348-OF-1972
    Security deposit rules, eviction process, written notice requirements
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  10. 10
    Landlord-tenant summary proceedings and small claims venue
    Verified: 2026-05-18
  11. 11
    Non-emergency 269-467-9045; primary noise/disturbance complaint channel in unincorporated Leonidas Twp
    Verified: 2026-05-18
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.