Lincoln Park, MI

  • Overview
  • Performance
  • Listings
  • Buy Box

Key Performance Metrics

Market snapshot

Performance indicators for the Lincoln Park short-term rental market based on reliable data.

Listings

41 / 97

Reliable / Active

Cap Rate

15%

Middle-Earners Gross Yield

Revenue

$21,792

Middle-Earners Revenue

Occupancy

77%

Middle-Earners Occupancy

Home Value

$147,641

Median Home Sale Price

Top Earners

$44,696

Top-Earners Revenue

Lincoln Park

Market Revenue Seasonality

Top Listings

Highest revenue

The highest-performing listings in Lincoln Park.

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B

Generally Investor friendly

Lincoln Park Regulations

STRs are allowed in single‑family districts as lodging houses with a strict cap of five guest rooms and platform coverage. The process involves verifying zoning, potential life‑safety inspection, local registration or business license, and state sales tax setup, with additional rules (parking, posted notices, quiet hours) likely. This is a known, manageable framework, though incomplete ordinance text and modest permitting complexity keep it B, not A.

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About Lincoln Park

Lincoln Park is a city in Wayne County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 38,144 at the 2010 census, down from 40,008 at the 2000 census. With a population density of 6,476.1/sq mi (2,500.4/km2) at the 2010 census, Lincoln Park is the second most-densely populated municipality in the state after Hamtramck. Lincoln Park contains Council Point Park, which dates back to 1763 when Chief Pontiac met with other tribal leaders along the banks of the Ecorse River to plot a rebellion against increasing European settlers, specifically those in nearby Fort Detroit. The Potawatomi eventually ceded the land to the French in 1776.
Lincoln Park is considered part of the Downriver collection of communities within Metro Detroit. The city borders Detroit to the north and also shares borders with Allen Park to the west, Ecorse to the east, Melvindale to the north, and Southgate and Wyandotte to the south. It developed as a bedroom community, providing homes to workers in the nearby steel mills and automobile plants of the Detroit area, while having no industries of its own. Lincoln Park was originally part of the now-defunct Ecorse Township, incorporating as a village in 1921 and again as a city in 1925.

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