Partial retail choice (10% cap). DTE and Consumers Energy Efficiency Programs offer $1M+ in annual commercial incentives. EV manufacturing surge driving charging infrastructure investment.
Based on Michigan market characteristics: rate structure, climate, regulatory environment, and utility program availability.
State-specific program data loading soon. In the meantime, explore federal incentives that apply to all Michigan businesses.
View All State Incentives →| Project Type | Cost Range | Unit | Source |
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| State-specific cost data coming soon — use our estimator for your project | |||
The average commercial electricity rate in Michigan is approximately 10.4¢ per kWh as of 2025–2026, which is 26.3% below national avg. Actual rates vary by utility, rate class, demand charges, and consumption level. Michigan has a regulated utility market — rates are set by the state public utilities commission.
Michigan businesses can access a combination of federal and state programs: (1) Federal ITC 48E — 30% tax credit for commercial solar and battery storage, applicable to all Michigan businesses; (2) 179D commercial buildings deduction — up to $5.36/sqft for qualifying energy efficiency improvements; (3) C-PACE financing — available in Michigan, allowing businesses to finance energy projects through property assessments with no upfront cost; (4) Utility rebate programs from DTE Energy and other providers. Visit our State Incentives Guide for the full Michigan program list.
Based on Michigan's electricity rate (10.4¢/kWh), climate characteristics, and available incentives, the highest-ROI commercial energy projects are: LED Lighting, HVAC Optimization, Building Automation. While base rates are below the national average, utility rebates and federal tax credits (ITC, 179D, MACRS) still drive compelling project economics.
Yes — Michigan has moderate solar potential and commercial solar economics are strong in 2026. The federal ITC 48E provides a 30% tax credit, MACRS allows accelerated 5-year depreciation (plus 40% bonus depreciation), and the 179D deduction may stack if the system is part of a broader energy efficiency package. C-PACE financing is available in Michigan, enabling 100% financing with cash-flow-positive projects from Day 1. Typical commercial solar payback in Michigan ranges from 4–9 years depending on project size, financing, and utility rate class.
Yes — Michigan has partial retail electricity choice for commercial customers. This means businesses can shop competitive retail electric providers (REPs) for their electricity supply, potentially accessing lower rates, fixed-price contracts, or renewable energy products not available from the incumbent utility. Distribution (poles and wires) remains with the local utility. EnergyStackHub can connect you with providers in Michigan — see our provider directory.
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