East Lansing, Clinton County, Michigan
East Lansing is a Michigan city in Clinton County, home to about 2,500 people.
This is the small slice of East Lansing that reaches north across the county line into Clinton County. Most of East Lansing — and Michigan State University, its defining institution — sits in Ingham County to the south, but the city's growth has pushed a residential edge into this corner of Clinton.
Population
~2,500
Type
city
Home tax rate
47.4–49.2 mills
School districts
3
What would you like to know?
Explore East Lansing
What it's like — the place, local stories, and what's worth knowing about the community.
Get to know it →Moving or buying here?
The property-tax pop-up, the homebuyer calculator, school-district rates, and the local rules to check.
See the practical stuff →Get to know it
About East Lansing
Living on the Clinton County side means your local services and tax picture can differ from the larger Ingham portion of the city. One thing to confirm for any address here: East Lansing charges a city income tax, and it applies even to the slivers that cross into Clinton County. As elsewhere in Michigan, property taxes also arrive in two separate bills a year, summer and winter.
A property-tax timing note: most Michigan communities send separate summer and winter property-tax bills. See the note below.
More about East Lansing
Porch Note
Living next to MSU: a botanical garden, a Zaha Hadid, and the Dairy Store
East Lansing and Meridian Township share a backyard with MSU's campus treasures — the nation's oldest university botanical garden, the Broad Art Museum, and legendary ice cream.
Read this note →Porch Note
Magic Johnson: From Lansing to History
From Everett High to a 1979 national title at Michigan State, the kid from Lansing helped change basketball forever.
Read this note →Porch Note
The Mastodon
Before robins or white pines, Michigan belonged to the giants — and the mastodon, the state fossil, still turns up in farm fields where it browsed 10,000 years ago.
Read this note →Porch Note
St. Johns, the Mint Capital of the World
Clinton County leads Michigan in mint, and county seat St. Johns has celebrated its Mint Capital title with a festival every August since the 1980s.
Read this note →The practical stuff
Moving or buying in East Lansing
The seller's tax bill may not be your tax bill.
2025 property-tax snapshot
- Primary home (PRE)
- 47.4201 mills - 49.2234 mills
- Other property / non-homestead
- 65.1425 mills - 67.2234 mills
- School districts available
- 3 in East Lansing
One mill means $1 per $1,000 of Taxable Value. Rate rows come from the official 2025 Michigan Treasury report. Last reviewed June 8, 2026.
What these local words mean
- Primary home (PRE)
- A home you own and live in as your main home. PRE stands for Principal Residence Exemption and can lower the school operating tax.
- Non-homestead
- Property that is not treated as the owner's main home, such as a rental, vacation home, or second home.
- Assessor
- The local office that estimates and records property values and exemptions.
- Treasurer
- The local office that collects property tax payments and can confirm bill timing.
Michigan homebuyer tax calculator
See the tax bill after you buy.
Where is the house?
Pick the county, city or township, and school district. We use the official 2025 tax rates published by Michigan Treasury.
Not sure of the school district? Check the property listing. It is usually under "Schools."
Need to double-check the exact parcel? Use the official state estimator at treas-secure.state.mi.us/ptestimator or call the local treasurer. Rates can change across city, township, village, and school district lines, so the exact parcel matters.
What buyers in East Lansing should know
Michigan property taxes start with Taxable Value, not the price you paid for the home. Local millage rates are applied to that number.
While the same owner keeps the home, Proposal A caps how much Taxable Value can rise each year. When the home sells, that cap usually comes off. This is called uncapping.
After uncapping, the buyer's Taxable Value usually moves closer to State Equalized Value, or SEV. SEV is often about half of the home's market value.
Bottom line: a longtime owner may have been taxed on an older, capped number. After you buy, the taxable number may reset higher, and your first full-year tax bill may be much higher than the seller's.
In East Lansing, your rate can vary by parcel. The school district tied to the property matters, and 3 school districts cover East Lansing.
For a primary home with PRE, Michigan's main-home exemption, rates currently run about 47.4 to 49.2 mills. Without PRE, non-homestead rates run about 65.1 to 67.2 mills. The calculator uses the exact local rates.
If this will be your main home, make sure the Principal Residence Exemption, or PRE, is handled with the local assessor. PRE is Michigan's main-home property tax exemption. It can remove up to 18 school operating mills. Rentals, vacation homes, and second homes usually use the non-homestead rate instead.
School districts in this area
Bath Community Schools
Primary home (PRE) 47.4201 mills · non-homestead 65.4201 mills
East Lansing School D
Primary home (PRE) 49.2234 mills · non-homestead 67.2234 mills
Lansing Public School
Primary home (PRE) 47.6947 mills · non-homestead 65.1425 mills
Local rules and costs to check
Note-sized practical catches tied to East Lansing: taxes, property rules, permits, local costs, or other things worth checking before you decide.
Porch Note
In Michigan, you get two property-tax bills a year — not one
Most Michigan property owners get separate summer and winter tax bills, with local rules deciding what lands on each bill.
Read this note →Porch Note
How Michigan State University shapes East Lansing — including your taxes
Michigan State University defines East Lansing's economy, housing market, taxable land base, and city-income-tax story.
Read this note →Porch Note
Renting out a house in East Lansing? The rules are strict
East Lansing tightly licenses rentals, limits unrelated roommates in single-family neighborhoods, and uses rental overlay districts.
Read this note →Porch Note
Lansing and East Lansing both have a city income tax
Lansing and East Lansing both charge a local income tax, with 1% resident and 0.5% nonresident rates under Michigan's city-income-tax system.
Read this note →Nearby places
Other Michigan Porch pages in Clinton County — handy when you're comparing local tax rates, school districts, or nearby communities.
Next steps
What to check next for East Lansing
Get oriented here, then choose the next practical guide, calculator, or nearby place.
County
Open Clinton County
See the county page for other cities, townships, villages, local notes, and the county-wide tax snapshot.
Open county page →Calculator
Run a buyer tax estimate
Use the Michigan homebuyer tax calculator if you want to compare a different place or school district.
Open calculator →Tax break
Understand PRE
Learn who qualifies for the primary-home tax break and how the deadlines work.
Read PRE guide →Questions buyers ask
Is this an exact number? +
No. It is a strong estimate based on Michigan's published 2025 tax rates for your area. Your actual bill depends on what the local assessor decides your home is worth, called the SEV. Use this to plan your budget, not to lock in an exact figure.
When will my higher tax kick in? +
The first calendar year after you close. Close in June 2026, and the seller's tax bill usually comes through for 2026. Your new popped-up bill arrives in 2027.
What's PRE? +
PRE is Michigan's primary-home tax break. If you own the home and live there as your main home, it can remove up to 18 mills of local school operating tax from the bill. Rentals, vacation homes, and second homes do not get it. File Form 2368 with the local assessor by June 1 for the summer bill or November 1 for the winter bill.
What are mills? +
Mills are the tax rate. One mill means $1 of tax for every $1,000 of Taxable Value. A 40-mill rate means about $40 per $1,000 of Taxable Value. Different areas have different rates because county, city or township, school, library, public safety, parks, and other local taxes are stacked together.
What's the inflation multiplier? +
It is the yearly number Michigan uses to cap Taxable Value increases while the same owner keeps the home. Think of it as the speed limit for Taxable Value. For the 2026 tax year, the multiplier is 1.027, or 2.7%. When a home sells, that cap usually resets.
Are there ways to avoid the pop-up? +
A few, mostly family transfers. Parent to child, spouse to spouse, sibling to sibling, and some grandparent transfers may avoid the reset if the home stays residential. For family transfers, talk to a Michigan real estate attorney.
Why is my number different from the tax history on a listing? +
Most tax history pages show what the current owner paid. That is often based on a protected, lower taxable value. This calculator estimates what your taxable value becomes after Michigan's uncapping rule.
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