| Right-to-disconnect law | No statewide law |
| Electronic monitoring disclosure | Required by statute |
| Expense reimbursement mandatory | Permissive (FLSA floor) |
| State personal income tax | Yes (4.05% top rate) |
Michigan has no right-to-disconnect statute. No bill restricting after-hours work contact has been enacted by the Michigan Legislature.
MCL 750.539c prohibits using a device to eavesdrop on a private conversation "without the consent of all parties." Michigan appellate courts (Sullivan v. Gray, 1982) have read the statute narrowly so a participant recording their own conversation is generally lawful, but the safe practice for employer monitoring of calls is to notify and obtain consent from all parties. Email and computer-activity monitoring on employer equipment is generally permitted with notice; no Michigan statute requires written notice for electronic monitoring (unlike NY/CT/DE).
Michigan has no statute mandating reimbursement of remote-work expenses. Default is the federal FLSA floor.
Michigan computes taxable income starting from federal AGI. Under TCJA, W-2 employees cannot deduct unreimbursed home-office expenses federally through 2025, and Michigan does not restore that deduction. Accountable-plan reimbursements from the employer remain tax-free. Watch the city income tax overlay if you live or work in Detroit, Grand Rapids, Lansing, or any of the ~24 Michigan cities with a local income tax.
Flat 4.05% state rate. Several cities (Detroit, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Flint, Saginaw, and others) levy a separate municipal income tax of 1-2.4% on residents and lower rates on nonresidents working in the city — relevant if you live or telecommute into a taxing city.
At-will employment: Michigan is an at-will employment state. Exceptions exist for written contracts, recognized public-policy violations, and a "legitimate expectations" doctrine (Toussaint v. Blue Cross) where an employee handbook creates an implied just-cause promise.
Michigan remote-work activity concentrates in Detroit and adjacent metros, with Ford, General Motors, Stellantis (Auburn Hills) among the larger remote-friendly headquarters. State-level BLS Telework Supplement micro-data was not retrievable at verification time; the national figure (~19-23% any-telework) is the closest available baseline.
Top remote-hub metro: Detroit
Notable remote-work employers headquartered in Michigan:
Our sister site CeoCult covers the federal + Michigan home-office tax deduction methodology in detail, including IRS Form 8829, the simplified $5/sq ft method, and the state-specific quirks for Michigan filers.
No statewide statute requires it. Under the federal FLSA, reimbursement is only required if unreimbursed work-from-home costs would drop your pay below the minimum wage. Many employers offer an accountable-plan stipend voluntarily because reimbursements paid that way are tax-free to you.
On employer-owned equipment and accounts, yes — Michigan has no statute requiring written notice of electronic monitoring (unlike New York or Connecticut). Voice-call recording is different: MCL 750.539c bars eavesdropping without consent of all parties, so taped calls between you and a customer should be announced.
If paid under a federal accountable plan (you substantiate the expense and return any excess), the stipend is excluded from federal AGI and therefore from Michigan taxable income. Flat cash stipends with no substantiation are taxable wages.
No. The Michigan Legislature has not enacted any statute restricting after-hours work communications. Any limits come from your employer's own policy or your contract.