Rental Investment Guide

Fruitport Charter Township


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

Updated May 2026

Area Overview


Fruitport Charter Township sits along the southern edge of Muskegon County between the cities of Muskegon and Grand Haven, with US-31 and I-96 cutting through the township and Spring Lake and Mona Lake forming its western water frontage. The community is roughly 30,000 residents across a mix of established subdivisions, lakefront homes, and rural acreage, which gives rentals here a steadier full-year demand profile than the tourist-driven Lake Michigan shoreline townships farther south.

Rental rules in Fruitport are handled at two different levels. Long-term rentals are governed by Ordinance 803 (Rental Unit Registration) as amended by Ordinance 805, which sits inside Chapter 6 of the township code (Buildings & Building Regulations) and requires registration with the township.[3][4] Short-term rentals are not explicitly addressed in Chapter 42 Zoning, which defines only hotel and motel uses and home occupations; the dwelling definition explicitly excludes hotels, motels, tourist cabins, boardinghouses, rooming houses, and basement dwellings.[5] That makes Fruitport a township where STR operators need to confirm parcel-level treatment with the Zoning Administrator before listing.

The Planning & Zoning office, the Clerk, and the Assessor all sit at the township hall at 5865 Airline Hwy and answer questions in person, by phone at 231-865-3151, and by email.[1][2] Building permits are administered through Michigan Township Services rather than in-house.[11]

Quick Status Summary


Short-Term Rentals NOT ADDRESSED

Fruitport’s Chapter 42 Zoning Code does not define short-term rentals, vacation rentals, or Airbnb-style transient lodging as a permitted use in any district. Hotels, motels, tourist cabins, boardinghouses, and rooming houses are expressly excluded from the dwelling definition.[5] No standalone STR ordinance was found on the township site. Confirm any specific parcel and intended use with the Zoning Administrator before listing.

Long-Term Rentals REGISTRATION REQUIRED

Long-term rentals are allowed in residential zoning districts and are governed by Ordinance 803 (Rental Unit Registration), amended by Ordinance 805.[3][4] Landlords must register each rental unit with the township; the exact fee schedule and inspection interval are inside the Ord 805 PDF, which is published as a scanned image and is not machine-readable. Verify current amounts directly with the township office.

Rental Regulations


๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Where STRs Stand in Zoning

Chapter 42 (Zoning) of the Fruitport Charter Township code does not name short-term rentals, vacation rentals, transient lodging, or Airbnb-style use as a permitted use in any zoning district.[5] The code’s dwelling definition specifically excludes "hotels, motels, tourist cabins, boardinghouses and/or roominghouses, or basement dwellings" from what counts as a dwelling, and the only transient-lodging use defined is "hotel and motel," which is treated as a commercial use, not a residential one.[5] Until the township adopts an STR ordinance or the Planning & Zoning office issues a written determination, the safest read is that whole-home short-term rental is not a use Chapter 42 contemplates in residential districts.

The township-published Zoning Map (August 2020 revision) shows the district boundaries.[7] For any specific parcel, the Muskegon County Property Viewer lets you look up the parcel number and confirm the district before contacting the Zoning Administrator.[8]

๐Ÿ“ Is There a Permit or Registration for STRs?

There is no dedicated short-term rental permit, license, or registration program published on the Fruitport Charter Township site.[4] The Rental Unit Registration ordinance (Ord 803/805) is written around long-term rental units, and the township ordinance index does not list a separate STR or vacation-rental ordinance.[4]

Operating short-term without a clear permitted-use determination puts the operator at risk of a zoning enforcement letter. The cleanest path is to email the Zoning Administrator (awalachovic@fruitporttownship.com) with the parcel number and intended use, get a written response in your file, and re-check with the Planning Commission before closing on a property you intend to use as an STR.[2][6]

๐Ÿ“‹ Operating Rules That Still Apply (Nuisance, Anti-Blight, Parking)

Even where zoning is silent on STRs, baseline township rules still apply to any occupied dwelling. Ordinance 824 (Anti-Blight and Junk Vehicles), adopted May 2026, governs exterior property condition, accumulated debris, inoperable vehicles, and similar standards that an absentee owner with rotating guests can easily run afoul of.[12] Noise nuisance, parking on the right-of-way, and trash storage are also reachable through the township police-power code and Muskegon County Sheriff response.

For STR operators specifically, the practical risks in Fruitport are (1) a neighbor complaint that triggers a zoning-use review, (2) anti-blight citations during turnovers, and (3) commercial-use issues if the township decides STR rises to a hotel/motel use that is not permitted in your district. None of those is a fee schedule, but each can shut down a listing.

๐Ÿ” How to Verify a Specific Parcel Before You Buy

For any property you are considering as a short-term rental in Fruitport, the verification stack is: (1) pull the parcel on the Muskegon County Property Viewer to confirm the zoning district shown there matches the township’s August 2020 zoning map,[7][8] (2) email the Zoning Administrator with the parcel ID and a one-sentence description of your intended use and ask for a written use determination,[2] and (3) ask the Building department (Michigan Township Services, who handles building permits for Fruitport) whether a change-of-use permit would be required.[11]

If the property is on a private well or septic rather than municipal utilities, also confirm capacity through Muskegon County Public Health before adding bedrooms or expanding occupancy.[9]

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

Long-term residential rental of a single-family or two-family dwelling is allowed in Fruitport’s residential zoning districts as a standard residential use โ€” the Chapter 42 dwelling definition covers conventional occupancy regardless of whether the occupant owns or rents the unit.[5] Multi-family rental is allowed where multi-family residential is a listed use in the district. The codified Chapter 42 text and the township-published Zoning Map are the two documents to consult to confirm a specific district’s allowances.[5][7]

For any specific parcel, pull the parcel number on the Muskegon County Property Viewer and confirm the listed zoning district against the township’s map.[8] District-by-district permitted-use tables are inside the Chapter 42 PDF.[5]

๐Ÿ“ Registration & Permit Process (Ordinance 803 / 805)

Long-term rentals in Fruitport are registered through the township under Ordinance 803 (Rental Unit Registration), amended by Ordinance 805 in 2025.[3][4] Submission is to the township office at 5865 Airline Hwy โ€” there is no online registration portal published; landlords contact the Clerk’s office at 231-865-3151 or aanderson@fruitporttownship.com for the current form and inspection scheduling.[1][2]

Important honesty note: Ordinance 805 is published as a scanned-image PDF, and the text inside it is not machine-readable.[3] That means the specific registration fee amount, inspection cycle, registration renewal interval, and exact list of which rental types are covered are not extractable from the public document and must be confirmed directly with the township. Get the current fee schedule and inspection timing in writing from the Clerk before relying on numbers from older versions of the ordinance.

๐Ÿ’ต Fees & Penalties

Specific dollar amounts for the rental registration fee, late-renewal fee, and per-unit inspection charge are inside Ordinance 805’s scanned PDF and are not machine-readable from the public document.[3] Call the Clerk’s office at 231-865-3151 or email aanderson@fruitporttownship.com and ask for the current rental registration fee schedule in writing โ€” that is the only reliable way to confirm what you will pay this cycle.[1]

For comparison, the Planning & Zoning fee schedule (last updated 2019) covers zoning permits, site plan review, and special-use permits and is published on the township site; it is a separate fee track from rental registration but useful if you are also changing use or adding a unit.[6]

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Inspections & Safety Requirements

Rental Unit Registration under Ord 803/805 contemplates an inspection component โ€” the title and structure of the ordinance is consistent with a periodic life-safety inspection of registered rental units.[3] The specific inspection cycle (annual, biennial, on-turnover, etc.) and the inspection checklist itself are inside the scanned PDF and not machine-readable; the Clerk’s office can supply both on request.[1]

Building permits and code inspections in Fruitport are administered through Michigan Township Services rather than the township directly โ€” this is the office to coordinate with for any work that triggers a building, electrical, mechanical, or plumbing permit before or after a rental inspection.[11]

๐Ÿงน Property Maintenance & Anti-Blight Standards

Fruitport adopted Ordinance 824 in May 2026 covering anti-blight and junk vehicles, and it applies to rental properties the same way it applies to owner-occupied ones.[12] Common rental-property triggers are accumulated household refuse, exterior storage of building materials, inoperable or unlicensed vehicles on the property, overgrown vegetation, and damaged exterior structures. Citations follow a notice-and-cure structure typical of Michigan township blight ordinances; repeat violations are a civil infraction.

For landlords operating in Fruitport from a distance, this is the ordinance most likely to generate a complaint between tenants โ€” having a local property manager or a turnover-cleaning vendor with eyes on the exterior of the property pays for itself.

โš–๏ธ Tenant Rights & Eviction Resources

Landlord-tenant disputes from Fruitport rentals are handled by the 60th District Court in Muskegon, which serves the entire county. Michigan’s statewide Truth in Renting Act, the Security Deposit Act, and the summary-proceedings eviction statute (MCL 600.5701 et seq.) all apply in Fruitport โ€” none of the township’s local ordinances override those state procedures.

Tenants and landlords looking for self-help materials are best served by Michigan Legal Help (michiganlegalhelp.org), which publishes county-specific eviction forms, and by Legal Aid of Western Michigan for income-qualified tenants. The township itself does not mediate tenant-landlord disputes.

Official Resources


Property Tax Treatment


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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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Sources & Downloads


  1. 1
    Fruitport Charter Township – Contact Us https://fruitporttownship-mi.gov/contact-us/
    Official township contact page; address, phone, staff emails
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  2. 2
    Fruitport Charter Township – Departments https://fruitporttownship-mi.gov/departments/
    Staff directory: clerk, treasurer, supervisor, assessor, zoning admin
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  3. 3
    Amends Ord 803 rental registration; PDF is scanned-image, contents not machine-readable
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  4. 4
    Fruitport Township – Ordinance Index https://fruitporttownship-mi.gov/ordinances/
    Full listing of code chapters and standalone ordinances
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  5. 5
    Codified zoning – defines hotel/motel & home occupation, excludes hotels/motels/tourist cabins from dwelling
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  6. 6
    Planning & Zoning – Fruitport Charter Township https://fruitporttownship-mi.gov/planning-zoning/
    Zoning admin contact, permit application, fee schedule, site plan
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  7. 7
    Official township zoning district map
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  8. 8
    County ArcGIS parcel/zoning lookup
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  9. 9
    Muskegon County Public Health – Septic Permits https://co.muskegon.mi.us/1042/Septic-Permits-Evaluations
    On-site sewage disposal permits and evaluations
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  10. 10
    BS&A Online – Fruitport Charter Township https://bsaonline.com/?uid=631
    Tax, assessment, and utility lookup & payment portal (uid=631)
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  11. 11
    Third-party building department serving Fruitport
    Verified: 2026-05-16
  12. 12
    Adopted May 2026; exterior property condition standards applicable to rentals
    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.