Real Estate

The Real Cost of a Vacant House in Detroit — Month by Month

vacant house in Detroit with overgrown yard and visible neglect

Here’s what most people tell themselves:

“It’s just sitting there.”

No it’s not.

It’s deteriorating. It’s costing you money. And it’s quietly getting harder to deal with every single month.

The reality is, vacant property costs in Detroit don’t stay flat—they stack. Fast.

A vacant house isn’t paused. It’s moving, just in the wrong direction.

And the longer you wait, the more expensive that movement becomes.

A vacant house in Detroit doesn’t sit still—it bleeds money.

In 12 months, a typical vacant property can cost you $40,000+ in:

  • Property taxes, insurance, and utilities
  • City fines and code violations
  • Damage from neglect, weather, or break-ins
  • Insurance claims that get denied because the home is vacant

And the longer you wait, the worse it gets—and the less your house is worth.

Let’s talk about the real holding costs of a vacant house.

Not guesses. Not theory.

This is what it actually looks like when a property sits.

At first, nothing feels urgent.

The house is empty, but it still looks like a house. Maybe the lawn gets a little shaggy. Maybe the mail piles up.

You’re still in control. Or at least it feels that way.

This is where most people lose time.

Because nothing has broken yet… but the clock is already running—and so are the holding costs.


Now it starts getting attention.

Neighbors notice. The city notices. Code enforcement starts driving by.

This is where Detroit vacant property fines begin to show up.

Grass violations. Trash. Peeling paint. Open entry points.

You get a notice on the door. Maybe a fine. Maybe multiple.

Still manageable. Still fixable.

But now you’re reacting instead of deciding.


This is where things turn.

Moisture gets in. Small issues become bigger ones.

Someone tests a door or window—and finds one that opens.

Now you’ve got risk.

And here’s the part most people don’t realize:

If you don’t have vacant home insurance, your coverage is basically worthless.

Something happens? Pipe bursts? Break-in?

Claim denied.

No appeal. No gray area. Just denied.


I walked a house on the west side of Detroit with a seller who had already moved out.

Not a bad house. Solid structure. Needed updates, sure but nothing crazy.

I gave him a fair offer based on what the property was worth at that time.

He hesitated. Wanted to think about it.

Thought maybe he’d list it.

Maybe a family member would take it over.

All normal. Understandable.


He calls me back. Same house. Completely different situation.

Now the grass is out of control. Notice on the door. Back door kicked in. Pipes burst over the winter.

Insurance claim?

DENIED.

No vacant property insurance.


Different energy.

Less confidence. More urgency.

He didn’t need options anymore.

He needed out.


It came in about $50,000 lower than before.

Same house.

Just ten months of damage and accumulating vacant property costs layered on top.

He didn’t argue.

Because by then, he understood exactly what waiting had cost him.


At this point, this isn’t a property anymore.

It’s a situation.

More damage. More fines. More stress.

The house isn’t sitting—it’s dragging everything down with it.

And the options you had earlier?

They’re gone.


This isn’t about pressure. It’s about math.

A vacant house doesn’t stay the same.

It gets worse. It gets more expensive. And it gets harder to solve.

Every month you wait, you lose a little more control.

Until eventually, the decision gets made for you.


At least understand what it’s costing you.

Not just in dollars, but in options.

Because the best time to deal with it is early.

Before the damage. Before the fines.

Before the $50,000 lesson.

If you want to understand your options for selling a vacant house in Michigan, this breaks it down clearly:

==> How to Sell a Vacant House in Michigan


A vacant house doesn’t wait.

It gets worse.

It gets more expensive.

And it gets harder to fix.

Wait long enough, and you don’t make the decision anymore—the situation makes it for you.


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About Dennis Fassett

I'm pleased to report that after multiple decades of hard-headed stubbornness, I've finally figured out that all work and no play makes Johnny a dull boy. So I've taken it upon myself to convert my wife and now adult(ish) kids into a roving band of merry adventurers. From horseback riding in Monument Valley to ocean kayaking in Acadia - all of our exploits have earned the coveted "epic" label from the younguns. I'll tell you about them - and also about the other "adventures" I'm having in my real estate investing business and my day job. You can also find me over at DennisBuysHouses.com
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