Michigan Plumbing Violations and Penalties

Michigan's plumbing regulatory framework assigns specific penalties to unlicensed work, permit failures, code violations, and inspection infractions — all enforced primarily through the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA). This page covers the classification of plumbing violations under Michigan law, the penalty structures that apply to licensed contractors and unlicensed individuals, and the procedural mechanics by which violations are investigated and resolved. Understanding this enforcement landscape is essential for contractors, inspectors, property owners, and legal professionals operating within the state.

Definition and scope

A plumbing violation in Michigan is any act, omission, or condition that contravenes the Michigan Plumbing Code (MPC), the rules promulgated under the Michigan Skilled Trades Regulation Act (Public Act 407 of 2016), or a local ordinance adopted consistent with state standards. Violations fall into two primary categories:

LARA's Bureau of Construction Codes (BCC) and its licensed trade division share enforcement authority, depending on whether the violation is technical (inspectable under the MPC) or credentialing-based (actionable under PA 407 of 2016).

This page covers violations and penalties that fall within Michigan state jurisdiction. It does not address violations under federal Safe Drinking Water Act enforcement, EPA cross-connection guidance applied at the federal level, or OSHA occupational safety citations issued to plumbing employers — those are separate regulatory tracks. Local municipality enforcement actions that exceed state minimums are also outside the scope of this page. For the broader regulatory framework, see Regulatory Context for Michigan Plumbing.

How it works

Enforcement of plumbing violations in Michigan proceeds through a structured sequence:

  1. Detection — Violations are identified through permit inspections, complaint filings with LARA or a local enforcing agency (LEA), or observed conditions during municipal inspections.
  2. Investigation — LARA's investigation staff or a designated LEA inspector reviews the work, licensure status of the performing contractor, and permit records.
  3. Notice of violation — A formal notice is issued to the responsible party. For licensing violations, this is typically a cease-and-desist or administrative complaint under PA 407 of 2016.
  4. Administrative hearing — The respondent may contest findings before an administrative law judge under the Michigan Administrative Procedures Act.
  5. Penalty assessment — If violations are upheld, civil fines, license suspension, license revocation, or required corrective work orders are imposed.
  6. Corrective action and re-inspection — Non-compliant work must be brought into conformance and re-inspected before occupancy or use is permitted.

Under PA 407 of 2016, unlicensed practice of a skilled trade, including plumbing, carries a civil fine of up to amounts that vary by jurisdiction per violation (Michigan Legislature, Public Act 407 of 2016, MCL 339.6033). Each day of continued unlicensed activity may constitute a separate violation, compounding exposure significantly.

For code-based violations, penalties depend on the severity classification assigned by the MPC or the LEA. Stop-work orders are the most immediate enforcement tool; they halt construction pending resolution and can trigger project delays, contract disputes, and reinspection fees.

Common scenarios

The most frequently documented plumbing violations in Michigan cluster around four operational contexts:

Unlicensed work on permitted projects — A contractor pulls a permit but uses an unlicensed worker to perform journeyman-level tasks without a licensed plumber on site. This violates both the MPC supervision requirements and PA 407 licensing rules simultaneously.

Permit avoidance — Plumbing alterations (water heater replacements, drain line rerouting, fixture additions) are completed without a permit in residential settings. Under the Michigan plumbing permit process, virtually all alterations beyond simple fixture repairs require a permit. Unpermitted work discovered during property sales or subsequent inspections can require full demolition and reconstruction.

Backflow prevention failures — Installation of cross-connections without approved backflow preventers violates both the MPC and Michigan's cross-connection control requirements. LARA and local health departments treat these as public health violations, which carry distinct penalty tracks separate from standard code infractions. The Michigan cross-connection control program outlines what assemblies and configurations are mandated.

Inspection evasion — Concealing rough-in plumbing behind walls or under slabs before a required rough-in inspection is completed constitutes a violation. Inspectors can order destructive exposure at the contractor's expense to verify compliance with Michigan drainage and venting requirements.

Decision boundaries

Whether a violation triggers license-level consequences versus code-correction-only consequences depends on who performed the work and under what authority:

Scenario Regulatory Track Potential Consequence
Licensed master plumber, code deficiency MPC / BCC Corrective work order, re-inspection fee
Licensed contractor, repeated deficiencies PA 407 / LARA License suspension, fines up to amounts that vary by jurisdiction per violation
Unlicensed individual, residential work PA 407 / LARA Civil fines, cease and desist, possible criminal referral
Permit holder, inspection evasion MPC / LEA Stop-work order, mandatory exposure, reinspection

A licensed master plumber performing code-deficient work faces primarily technical correction requirements on a first offense. An unlicensed individual performing the same work faces both the technical correction obligation and the licensing penalty structure — these tracks are parallel and additive. For an overview of how Michigan structures plumbing qualifications, the Michigan Plumbing Authority home page outlines the credential categories and associated responsibilities.

Contractors operating in specialty segments — such as Michigan plumbing for food service establishments or Michigan mobile home plumbing standards — face additional inspection regimes from MDARD or MHD respectively, meaning a single installation can generate violations under more than one regulatory body simultaneously.

References

📜 5 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log