Mid Term Rentals in Michigan: Why 28 Day Stays Are Reshaping the Short Term Market
- Posted by Morgan Detvay
- On February 27, 2026
The short term rental market has changed.
What worked in 2021 does not automatically work today. Supply has increased in many markets, and demand patterns have shifted. One of the most significant developments is the growth of mid term rentals, typically defined as stays of 28 days or longer.
Mid Term Rentals Are Capturing More Demand
Mid term stays are growing in:
• Employment corridors
• Hospital systems
• Insurance displacement placements
• University markets
• Corporate relocation markets
For Michigan investors, this shift creates both risk and opportunity.
The Risk of Relying Solely on Airbnb
Platform concentration creates operational risk.
Algorithms change. Policies shift. Accounts can be paused. Operators who rely exclusively on one booking platform expose themselves to volatility.
Diversification across platforms and the ability to pivot to mid term rentals provides stability.
Evaluating True STR Profitability
High occupancy does not automatically equal profitability.
Break even calculations must include:
• Management fees
• Utilities
• Platform fees
• Turnover costs
• Supplies
• Reserves
• Vacancy gaps
A property that appears strong at 75 percent occupancy may struggle once true operating costs are applied.
Every STR investor should ask:
If nightly demand softens, does this property work as a mid term rental or long term lease?
Structure Determines Long Term Success
Short term rental ownership is no longer passive income.
It requires:
• Dynamic pricing
• Compliance tracking
• Guest screening
• Documentation
• Damage recovery processes
• 24 hour responsiveness
The operators who perform well over the next five years will not be the most aggressive. They will be the most structured.
For Michigan STR investors, mid term diversification and disciplined operations are becoming essential components of long term performance.
