HavenCostGuide

Free · 2026 rebate dataset · Michigan

Michigan smart-home rebates 2026

Every 2026 smart-home rebate available in Michigan — 1 active programs from 1 utilities. Smart thermostats, heat pumps, EV chargers, insulation, smart sprinklers. Direct links to application pages.

Written byRiley Okafor· Methodology Editor
Reviewed byJordan Mercer· Senior Cost Analyst
Last reviewed
HEEHRA statusLIVEIncome-qualified households can claim point-of-sale rebates NOW (up to $8K for heat pumps, $1.6K for insulation).

Last reviewed · Next refresh July 1, 2026. We re-audit every utility program each quarter.

1 active program in Michigan

  • 🌡️

    Smart thermostat · Consumers Energy / DTE

    Smart thermostat rebate

    $50

    Single-family residential only.

    View program details →

Save Michigan's rebate stack as a PDF

One-pager you can send to your contractor / CPA / spouse before signing a quote. No email required.

What rebate stack actually exists in Michigan in 2026?

Cold-winter dominant

Michigan has 1 actively-funded smart-home rebate program in 2026, distributed across 1 primary utility: Consumers Energy / DTE. Michigan has one of the heaviest heating burdens in the country — roughly 60-70% of an average household's annual energy spend goes toward heating between October and April. That single fact reshapes which rebates pay off here: cold-climate heat pumps, attic and wall insulation, and weatherization rebates do the heaviest lifting on your utility bill, while air-source heat-pump conversion (replacing oil, propane, or older electric resistance heat) is the highest-dollar single program category in Michigan in 2026. The strongest categories in Michigan this year are Smart thermostat. Every dollar listed on this page is verified against the utility's own program page as of 2026, and we re-audit quarterly.

Programs broken out by category

Below is what's funded in Michigan this year, organized by category so you can map your specific upgrade to the right program before signing a contract. Dollar amounts shown are each utility's 2026 schedule.

Smart thermostat

Consumers Energy / DTE $50.

Smart-thermostat rebates are the easiest single rebate to claim — most utilities approve in 4-6 weeks with no contractor receipt required. The trade-off is the absolute dollar amount is small (typically $50-$120 per device), and many programs require enrollment in a demand-response or peak-savings program where the utility briefly adjusts your thermostat during grid events.

HEEHRA in Michigan: what you can claim today

HEEHRA is live in Michigan — income-qualified households can claim point-of-sale rebates today, which means your installer applies the rebate amount as a discount on your invoice rather than you waiting for a check. Eligibility is tied to Area Median Income (AMI): households under 80% AMI get the full rebate, 80-150% AMI get a partial rebate, and above 150% AMI aren't eligible. The maximum stack is $14,000 across all categories: $8,000 on a heat pump, $1,750 on a heat-pump water heater, $4,000 on electrical-panel upgrades to support heat-pump load, plus $1,600 on insulation and $2,500 on wiring. You can claim federal 25C and 25D credits in the same tax year on top of HEEHRA where the equipment isn't already 100% covered.

Worked example: stacking federal + state + utility in Michigan

Without a major utility heat-pump rebate listed in Michigan, the stacking math collapses to just the federal tier: 25C credit of up to $2,000 on the heat pump (or up to $1,200 on insulation/weatherization), 25D at 30% with no cap on solar PV, and 8911 at 30% capped $1,000 on EV-charger installation. Those credits are claimed on your annual federal return — not at the point of sale — so you fund the install up front and recover at tax time. HEEHRA is live in Michigan and stacks on top, so income-qualified households can still reach the same ~$14,000 maximum even without a utility-level program.

The five common mistakes that kill Michigan rebate claims

Every rebate program has paperwork friction, and most rejected claims fall into one of these five buckets — worth scanning before you commit to a contractor in Michigan.

  1. 1Buying equipment before applying. Most Michigan utility rebates require pre-approval — the program needs to see the proposal/quote, not just the receipt.
  2. 2Assuming income eligibility without confirming. HEEHRA tiers are tied to Area Median Income for your specific county; check the HUD AMI lookup tool before you assume you qualify (or assume you don't).
  3. 3Skipping the energy audit. Several Michigan programs require a utility-approved energy audit as a precondition — the audit itself is often free or rebated, and unlocks 20-40% more in downstream rebate eligibility.
  4. 4Using equipment not on the qualified-products list. AHRI and ENERGY STAR certification numbers are what utility staff check first. Even a top-tier model from a brand-name installer can get rejected if the model wasn't on the QPL the day you bought it.
  5. 5Forgetting to claim federal alongside utility. The federal 25C credit and most state/utility rebates explicitly stack — they don't reduce each other's eligibility. A surprising number of households claim one and forget the other.

What to do next — your Michigan action checklist

  • 1Click through to each program above and screenshot the current rebate amount + your eligibility window — programs can pause when funding is exhausted.
  • 2Get a written contractor quote that references the specific AHRI / ENERGY STAR model numbers you want, so the rebate-claim paperwork is one-shot.
  • 3Check HUD AMI for your Michigan county if HEEHRA eligibility might be in play.
  • 4Pin or save this page — we re-audit Michigan rebate amounts every quarter, so the numbers here stay current.

This page is reviewed quarterly by Riley Okafor (Methodology Editor) and Jordan Mercer (Senior Cost Analyst). Dollar amounts shown are verified against the utility's own program page each quarter — see methodology for how we source and re-audit the dataset.

Frequently asked: Michigan rebates

What smart-home rebates are available in Michigan in 2026?

Michigan has 1 active utility-level smart-home rebate program in 2026, covering Smart thermostat. Top programs: Consumers Energy / DTE ($50). Federal 25C/25D tax credits stack on top.

Is HEEHRA live in Michigan?

HEEHRA (Home Energy Rebate Assistance) status in Michigan: ✓ HEEHRA LIVE — Apply now at your state energy office.. Income-qualified households can claim point-of-sale rebates NOW (up to $8K for heat pumps, $1.6K for insulation).

How much is the Consumers Energy / DTE smart thermostat rebate in 2026?

Consumers Energy / DTE offers $50 for smart thermostat rebate in Michigan. Single-family residential only. Verify current eligibility and application instructions at the utility's program page.

Save Michigan's 2026 rebate stack so you can come back when your utility's program window opens

Pin this