Enter a Lansing street address or parcel number. We compare the value the City placed on the home for taxes with what similar nearby homes have actually sold for recently, and show whether that looks higher than Michigan law allows. It is an estimate, it answers a different question than the map, and it does not cover the parts of the City that are in Eaton or Clinton counties. No names or accounts, and nothing is stored.
This tool exists so the assessment-fairness test can be checked by anyone. Every figure below comes from a public government record that any resident can request again and re-run.
This is an independent analysis of public records. It is not legal advice, tax advice, an appraisal, or the City's official assessment. An assessment ratio above the legal level, or a high composite score, shown here is an estimate and does not mean the City of Lansing, Ingham County, the Michigan State Tax Commission, or any other body agrees with it or will change an assessment or take any action. The only ways to formally contest an assessment are the local March Board of Review and then the Michigan Tax Tribunal, each with its own statutory deadline. Nothing here creates any obligation on any government body to act.
The City of Lansing spans three counties. This tool covers only the
parts of the City assessed within Ingham County (parcels
in the City of Lansing assessing unit, parcel prefix 33-01).
The smaller parts of the City that fall in Eaton and
Clinton counties are assessed by other offices, were not
part of the record used here, and are not yet included. Adding them would
require a City of Lansing Assessor export of the whole-City roll: the City
assessor sets and holds the assessed values and sales for the entire City,
including the Eaton and Clinton portions. The public Eaton and Clinton
county GIS portals were checked at the field level and do not publish the
recorded-sale data the ratio needs, so they are not a substitute for that
record.
All parcel, valuation, and sales figures come from the
Ingham County Department of Equalization 2025 assessment
roll, released as a Michigan Freedom of Information Act response,
reference W061193-031426 (BS&A export,
assessment year 2025). Any member of the public can submit the same FOIA
request to Ingham County Equalization and receive the identical parcel
master and sales (L-4260) file used here. Millage rates are from the
Ingham County 2025 Apportionment Report.
Michigan law (MCL 211.27a) sets a property's State
Equalized Value (SEV) at 50% of its true cash (market) value.
So a fair assessment ratio is SEV / market value = 0.50. A
ratio of 1.00 means a home is assessed at 100% of its market value,
which is twice the legal level. An assessment ratio above 0.50
means the home is assessed above what the law allows.
The map colours H3 hexagons by the assessment ratio of the homes inside them, computed exactly as in the underlying analysis:
is_arms_length = 1) of
≥ $10,000 since 2020-01-01; keep each
parcel's most recent such sale.SEV / that sale price (2025 SEV).prop_city = 'LANSING' and
SEV > 0, which is 7,696 City-of-Lansing
arm's-length sales, matching the published brief. (No property-class
filter is applied; that is what reproduces the 7,696 figure. The map
itself can place the 6,683 of those that fall in the City of Lansing
assessing unit, parcel prefix 33-01, and have parcel
geometry; the remainder carry a Lansing mailing city but sit in adjacent
assessing units.)In the published analysis this method yields, for the City of Lansing, a bottom decile (cheapest tenth of homes) assessed at 126% of market value, with 95.7% of those homes over the legal level. The City of Lansing's coefficient of dispersion (COD) is 28.75 and its price-related differential (PRD) is 1.33. These are City of Lansing figures. The Ingham county-wide numbers are different and larger (COD 36.59, PRD 1.341) and are never shown here as City figures.
max(0, SEV − 0.5 × sale price) × millage
at the City of Lansing / Lansing-schools homestead or non-homestead rate.
It is the post-uncapping figure (what a recent or next buyer pays; see
Proposal A below) and is an estimate, not a bill.The composite is a single 0 to 100 score per area that answers one question: where is over-assessment both worst and landing on the households least able to absorb it? Each component is min-max normalised across the shown hexes and combined with fixed weights:
The composite is a constructed, weighted estimate, not an official or legal measure. The weights are a transparent editorial choice, stated here so they can be checked or changed; every component is also available as its own map layer. A high score is not a finding that any law has been broken or that any body must act.
Toggle "Tax-foreclosed homes 2024-25" on the map to see the City-of-Lansing homes that went through the Ingham County Treasurer's 2024 and 2025 tax-foreclosure auctions. Joining those auction outcomes to the 2025 assessment roll: of the 59 Lansing homes that sold at auction with a usable price, 57 (about 97%) had a 2025 SEV above the 50% legal level relative to the price they sold for, and 41 (about 70%) were assessed for more than the entire price the home actually fetched. The median ratio is about 135%, close to the 127% A-12 found for its hand-checked subset and to the bottom-decile pattern on the map. A further 8 parcels found no buyer at either auction and went to the county Land Bank.
Method and limits: auction parcels were read from the Ingham County Treasurer "Bids Won By Lot" PDFs (two have a text layer; two were scanned and recovered with OCR). Each parcel id is matched to the Ingham FOIA parcel master, and the 2025 SEV is taken from that authoritative record, so an OCR-garbled id simply drops out; the only auction-sourced number is the winning bid. The nine parcels independently hand-verified in the A-12 brief override the extraction. Auction prices are distressed-sale prices and understate market value, so the ratios are an upper estimate of over-assessment relative to true market value; the direction of the finding (the foreclosed homes were over-assessed) is robust to that, but the exact ratios are estimates. This is not a finding that any body broke a law or must act.
The "Check a home" view answers a different, narrower question:
for one home, is its SEV out of line with recent arm's-length sales of
similar nearby homes? It finds up to five comparable sales (same property
class, within 25% square footage, within 20 years, same city, last 18
months, widened if too few), takes the median comp sale price as the
market estimate, and reports SEV / that estimate. Because it
averages against the wider market, it is deliberately conservative and will
often read closer to 0.50 than the map's own-sale measure. It is an
estimate, not the City's official value. The two views are complementary,
not contradictory.
Over-assessment is on the SEV. Under Michigan's Proposal A, a home's taxable value is capped while the same owner holds it, so a long-tenured owner whose taxable value sits below the inflated SEV may not pay the full over-assessment yet, but it is realised in full when the home next sells and the taxable value "uncaps" to the SEV. A recent buyer pays it from the first bill. The estimated-excess figures use the post-uncapping amount. Do not read the map as "every owner overpays this much every year."
W061193-031426 (or an equivalent current
parcel + sales export) from Ingham County Equalization.scripts/): the hex layer, the demographic and
income join, the composite, and the per-home checker.