State Income Tax
4.05%
4.05% flat rate
Sales Tax
6
State rate (local rates vary)
Special LLC Tax
None
No extra LLC-level tax
Community Property
No
Standard tax rules apply

LLC Pass-Through Taxation

By default, LLCs don't pay taxes directly. Instead, the LLC members report the income (or losses) on their personal Form 1040 tax return. This is called pass-through taxation — tax responsibility "passes through" the LLC to its owners.

How Are LLCs Taxed in Michigan?

By default, a Michigan LLC is taxed by the IRS based on the number of members:

  • An LLC with 1 owner (Single-Member LLC) is taxed like a Sole Proprietorship
  • An LLC with 2+ owners (Multi-Member LLC) is taxed like a Partnership

These are the "default" statuses — automatically applied based on member count. You can also elect to have your LLC taxed as a Corporation (S-Corp or C-Corp) by filing extra paperwork with the IRS.

Single-Member LLC (default)

The IRS treats Single-Member LLCs as Disregarded Entities — the LLC doesn't file its own federal return. Instead, the owner reports LLC income on their personal Form 1040 (Schedule C if owned by an individual).

Multi-Member LLC (default)

Multi-Member LLCs file a Form 1065 Partnership Return and issue a Schedule K-1 to each member. Each member then reports their share of profits on their personal Form 1040.

Electing Corporate Taxation

  • S-Corporation: File Form 2553 with the IRS. Can reduce self-employment taxes once the LLC has consistent profits (generally $70,000+ net income per member). Speak with an accountant first.
  • C-Corporation: File Form 8832 with the IRS. Uncommon for small LLCs. Primarily useful for large employers offering healthcare fringe benefits.

Michigan State Income Tax

Michigan has a state income tax at rates of 4.05% flat rate. LLC members report their share of LLC profits on their Michigan state tax return.

Single-Member LLC owners file Michigan Form MI-1040 and include LLC income. Multi-Member LLCs file Michigan Form 1065 (Partnership Return) and issue Michigan Schedule K-1s to members.

Contact the Michigan Department of Treasury at 517-636-4486 for more information.

Local Income Tax

You and/or your LLC may also need to file and pay income taxes with your local municipality (city, county, etc.). Contact your local government or hire an accountant to confirm local requirements.

Michigan Sales Tax

If your LLC sells taxable products (and sometimes services) in Michigan, you may need to collect sales tax and register for a Seller's Permit (also called a resale license or sales tax permit).

Michigan's state sales tax rate is 6% — a flat statewide rate with no local additions.

Register for Michigan Seller's Permit →

Contact the Michigan Department of Treasury at 517-636-4357 with questions.

Michigan LLC Payroll Taxes

If your Michigan LLC has employees, you must handle payroll taxes, which include:

  • Federal income tax withholding
  • Michigan state income tax withholding
  • Social Security and Medicare taxes (FICA)
  • Federal unemployment tax (FUTA)
  • Michigan state unemployment tax (SUTA)

Payroll calculations are complex — most LLC owners hire a payroll service or accountant.

Michigan Tax Agency Contact

Agency
Michigan Department of Treasury
Phone
Hours
Mon–Fri, 8am–5pm ET

Michigan LLC Taxes — FAQs

Yes. Single-Member LLC owners file Michigan Form MI-1040. Multi-Member LLCs file Michigan Form 1065.
Yes. Michigan LLCs pay a $25/year Annual Statement fee to LARA, due February 15.
Your tax classification is based on the number of members. One member = taxed as a Sole Proprietorship. Two or more members = taxed as a Partnership. To be taxed as a Corporation, you must file Form 2553 (S-Corp) or Form 8832 (C-Corp) with the IRS. If unsure, call the IRS at 800-829-4933.
Yes. Michigan has a state income tax with rates of 4.05% flat rate.
Yes. Michigan's state sales tax rate is 6% — a flat statewide rate with no local additions.
Haven't formed your Michigan LLC yet?

Read the step-by-step formation guide with filing fees, processing times, and annual report deadlines.

Formation guide →
General information only — not legal or tax advice. Tax rates, forms, and requirements change. This guide reflects publicly available information as of June 2026. Confirm current requirements with the Michigan Department of Treasury and a qualified CPA or tax attorney before filing. Last verified: June 2026. Full disclaimer