Michigan Real Estate News

Timely  |  Relevant  |  Informative

Boyne City Approves Short-Term Rental Ordinance

Boyne City City Commission approved a short-term rental ordinance on December 13. Boyne City officials started in July 2021 to create an ordinance that would be tailor-made for their community. Several special meetings were held to identify the impacts and issues of short-term rentals. The ordinance was created in an attempt to address those impacts and issues and allow the short-term rentals to exist. The commissioners were not able to agree on a proposed maximum limit on the number of short-term rental allowed in the traditional residential district. They decided to move ahead with approving the ordinance without having the cap decided.

 

 

 

Michigan’s Residential Real Estate Market Is Stabilizing

The 2023 real estate market is finally starting to look like it might normalize. Seasonality is back in the resale market, and rent increases and high supply costs have mostly stabilized. However, interest rates will remain high, pricing some buyers out of home ownership. Some materials costs continue to be issues. While materials costs have rebounded for the most part, builders are now more conditioned to check on lead times and suggest alternatives if long waits are indicated. Building materials that once took eight months to arrive are now arriving after 4-6 weeks. Lumber is at pre-pandemic prices, while materials like concrete continue to be expensive. Rents are stabilizing. Fewer people are leaving apartments to buy homes, and people are doubling up. Home sale prices are dropping in some areas, like Wyandotte, Southgate and Riverview. Experts are expecting the industry market to contract, with realtors who are inexperienced in a tight market leaving the business.

 

 

Petoskey Home Projects Step Toward More Affordable Housing

Northern Homes Community Development Corporation began construction on two homes near downtown Petoskey. The projects received funding from Charlevoix State Bank and the Federal Home Loan Bank of Indianapolis. According to Northern Homes Executive Director Jane Mackenzie, making the homes affordable for local residents is a tricky endeavor. Households earning less than 80% of the area median income with a family of four will be able to purchase the homes. The properties are part of the Northern Homes Community Land Trust program.