


Listing Courtesy of: MichRic / Listed By: Buffy Schichtel, Coldwell Banker Woodland Schmidt 1602 Beach Street Muskegon, MI 49441
Active (5 Days)
$699,000 (USD)
Description
MLS #:
26027377
26027377
Taxes
$3,048
$3,048
Lot Size
5,401 SQFT
5,401 SQFT
Type
Single-Family Home
Single-Family Home
Year Built
1920
1920
County
Muskegon County
Muskegon County
Listed By
Buffy Schichtel, Coldwell Banker Woodland Schmidt
Source
MichRic
Last checked Jun 9 2026 at 9:40 PM GMT+0000
MichRic
Last checked Jun 9 2026 at 9:40 PM GMT+0000
Bathroom Details
- Full Bathrooms: 2
Interior Features
- Range
- Dishwasher
- Microwave
- Refrigerator
- Oven
- Garage Door Opener
- Dryer
- Eat-In Kitchen
- Washer Ceiling Fan(s)
- Broadband
Lot Information
- Sidewalk
- Adj to Public Land
- Level
Property Features
- Fireplace: Gas Log
- Fireplace: Family Room
Heating and Cooling
- Forced Air
- Central Air
Basement Information
- Full
Flooring
- Carpet
- Tile
- Wood
Exterior Features
- Vinyl Siding
Utility Information
- Sewer: Public
School Information
- Elementary School: Lakeside School
- Middle School: Muskegon Middle School
- High School: Muskegon High School
Garage
- Garage
Parking
- Detached
- Garage Door Opener
- Garage Faces Front
Stories
- 2.00000000
Living Area
- 1,971 sqft
Location
Disclaimer: Copyright 2026 Michigan Regional Information Center (MichRIC). All rights reserved. This information is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed. The information being provided is for consumers’ personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing. Data last updated 6/9/26 14:40

The City Commission passed these updates after sharp pushback from full-time residents. The restrictions were designed to solve three main issues:
Preserving Long-Term Housing: With the boom of vacation rentals, local buyers and year-round renters were being priced out of the market. Investors buying up residential homes solely to use as full-time Airbnbs significantly reduced the local housing supply.
Protecting Neighborhood Character: Full-time residents frequently complained to the city about the hotel-ization of their quiet streets--specifically citing rotating crowds of vacationers, loud parties, and properties being overrun during peak summer months.
Parking and Trash Overload: Many residential homes in Muskegon weren't built to handle five or six cars per driveway. The city established strict rules prohibiting guests from parking on lawns, over sidewalks, or blocking mailboxes, alongside requiring mandatory weekly trash service.
=ú Are There Any Loopholes?
Yes. If you want to operate a short-term rental without a strict zone cap, the property must be located within the boundaries of the Downtown Development Authority, the Lakeside Business Improvement District, or the Lakeside Corridor Improvement Authority. The city intentionally exempted these commercial/business districts from the caps to encourage tourism growth where it wouldn't disrupt quiet residential pockets.
Additionally, if a host lives on the property full-time and just rents out a room or an attached guest suite while remaining on-site, it is classified as a hosted rental rather than a full STR, though it must still be registered with the city.