If the property tax is breaking you, there are real outs.
You can lose a paid-off home to taxes you can't cover — but Michigan has actual relief most people never apply for, because no one tells them. Here are the three big ones. Not legal or tax advice — a sourced map. Rules, dollar limits, and deadlines change yearly and vary by city/township; confirm with your local assessor/treasurer.
The three doors
Your city or township can reduce or wipe out the property tax on your primary residence if poverty means you can't pay. You own & live in the home, meet income standards, and (for 2025) assets generally can't top ~$50,000. You must apply every year with your local assessor or Board of Review — and there are deadlines.
Source: Michigan Treasury — Poverty Exemption. (Detroit residents: the program is called HOPE — detroitmi.gov HOPE.)
A credit on your state income tax return when property taxes eat too much of your income. General claimants can get up to 60% of the amount taxes exceed 3.5% of income (seniors up to 100%), capped (recently ~$1,200). File it even if you don't owe income tax — it can come back as a refund.
Source: Michigan Treasury (MI-1040CR). Confirm the current cap & income limits for your tax year.
Some homeowners (often seniors, or those waiting on a credit refund) can defer summer taxes without penalty for a window. It's local and situational — ask your city/township treasurer directly whether a deferral is available and whether you qualify.
Pointer: Michigan Legislature — Services for Seniors; your local treasurer's office is the authority.