(1) In General. Costs will be allowed to the prevailing party in an action, unless prohibited by statute or by these rules or unless the court directs otherwise, for reasons stated in writing and filed in the action.
(2) Frivolous Claims and Defenses. In an action filed on or after October 1, 1986, if the court finds on motion of a party that an action or defense was frivolous, costs shall be awarded as provided by MCL 600.2591.
(B) Rules for Determining Prevailing Party.
(1) Actions With Several Judgments. If separate judgments are entered under MCR 2.116 or 2.505(A) and the plaintiff prevails in one judgment in an amount and under circumstances which would entitle the plaintiff to costs, he or she is deemed the prevailing party. Costs common to more than one judgment may be allowed only once.
(2) Actions With Several Issues or Counts. In an action involving several issues or counts that state different causes of action or different defenses, the party prevailing on each issue or count may be allowed costs for that issue or count. If there is a single cause of action alleged, the party who prevails on the entire record is deemed the prevailing party.
(3) Actions With Several Defendants. If there are several defendants in one action, and judgment for or dismissal of one or more of them is entered, those defendants are deemed prevailing parties, even though the plaintiff ultimately prevails over the remaining defendants.
(4) Costs on Review in Circuit Court. An appellant in the circuit court who improves his or her position on appeal is deemed the prevailing party.
(C) Costs in Certain Trivial Actions. In an action brought for damages in contract or tort in which the plaintiff recovers less than $100 (unless the recovery is reduced below $100 by a counterclaim), the plaintiff may recover costs no greater than the amount of damages.
(D) Costs When Default or Default Judgment Set Aside. The following provisions apply to an order setting aside a default or a default judgment:
(1) If personal jurisdiction was acquired over the defendant, the order must be conditioned on the defendant's paying or securing payment to the party seeking affirmative relief the taxable costs incurred in procuring the default or the default judgment and acting in reliance on it;
(2) If jurisdiction was acquired by publication, the order may be conditioned on the defendant's paying or securing payment to the party seeking affirmative relief all or a part of the costs as the court may direct;
(3) If jurisdiction was in fact not acquired, costs may not be imposed.
(E) Costs in Garnishment Proceedings Brought Pursuant to 3.101(M). Costs in garnishment proceedings to resolve the dispute between a plaintiff and a garnishee regarding the garnishee’s liability are allowed as in civil actions. Costs may be awarded to the garnishee defendant as follows:
(1) The court may award the garnishee defendant as costs against the plaintiff reasonable attorney fees and other necessary expenses the garnishee defendant incurred in filing the disclosure, if the issue of the garnishee defendant's liability to the principal defendant is not brought to trial.
(2) The court may award the garnishee defendant, against the plaintiff, the total costs of the garnishee defendant's defense, including all necessary expenses and reasonable attorney fees, if the issue of the garnishee defendant's liability to the principal defendant is tried and
(a) the garnishee defendant is held liable in a sum no greater than that admitted in disclosure, or
(b) he plaintiff fails to recover judgment against the principal defendant. In either (a) or (b), the garnishee defendant may withhold from the amount due the principal defendant the sum awarded for costs, and is chargeable only for the balance.
(F) Procedure for Taxing Costs at the Time of Judgment.
(1) Costs may be taxed by the court on signing the judgment, or may be taxed by the clerk as provided in this subrule.
(2) When costs are to be taxed by the clerk, the party entitled to costs must present to the clerk, within 28 days after the judgment is signed, or within 28 days after entry of an order denying a motion for new trial, a motion to set aside the judgment, a motion for rehearing or reconsideration, or a motion for other postjudgment relief except a motion under MCR 2.612(C),
(a) a bill of costs conforming to subrule (G),
(b) a copy of the bill of costs for each other party, and
(c) a list of the names and addresses of the attorneys for each party or of parties not represented by attorneys. In addition, the party presenting the bill of costs shall immediately serve a copy of the bill and any accompanying affidavits on the other parties. Failure to present a bill of costs within the time prescribed constitutes a waiver of the right to costs.
(3) Within 14 days after service of the bill of costs, another party may file objections to it, accompanied by affidavits if appropriate. After the time for filing objections, the clerk must promptly examine the bill and any objections or affidavits submitted and allow only those items that appear to be correct, striking all charges for services that in the clerk's judgment were not necessary. The clerk shall notify the parties in the manner provided in MCR 2.107.
(4) The action of the clerk is reviewable by the court on motion of any affected party filed within 7 days from the date that notice of the taxing of costs was sent, but on review only those affidavits or objections that were presented to the clerk may be considered by the court.
(G) Stay of Collecting Taxed Costs. The court or the clerk must stay the enforcement of an award taxing costs to a prevailing party under subrule (F) until expiration of the time for filing an appeal in the appropriate appellate court, or if an appeal is filed, while a claim of appeal or application for leave to appeal in the appropriate appellate court is pending.
(H) Bill of Costs; Supporting Affidavits.
(1) Each item claimed in the bill of costs, except fees of officers for services rendered, must be specified particularly.
(2) The bill of costs must be verified and must contain a statement that
(a) each item of cost or disbursement claimed is correct and has been necessarily incurred in the action, and
(b) the services for which fees have been charged were actually performed.
(3) If witness fees are claimed, an affidavit in support of the bill of costs must state the distance traveled and the days actually attended. If fees are claimed for a party as a
witness, the affidavit must state that the party actually testified as a witness on the days listed.
(I) Taxation of Fees on Settlement. Unless otherwise specified a settlement is deemed to include the payment of any costs that might have been taxable.
(J) Special Costs or Damages.
(1) In an action in which the plaintiff's claim is reduced by a counterclaim, or another fact appears that would entitle either party to costs, to multiple costs, or to special damages for delay or otherwise, the court shall, on the application of either party, have that fact entered in the records of the court. A taxing officer may receive no evidence of the matter other than a certified copy of the court records or the certificate of the judge who entered the judgment.
(2) Whenever multiple costs are awarded to a party, they belong to the party. Officers, witnesses, jurors, or other persons claiming fees for services rendered in the action are entitled only to the amount prescribed by law.
(3) A judgment for multiple damages under a statute entitles the prevailing party to single costs only, except as otherwise specially provided by statute or by these rules.
(K) Costs in Headlee Amendment Suits. A plaintiff who prevails in an action brought pursuant to Const 1963, art 9, § 32 shall receive from the defendant the costs incurred by the plaintiff in maintaining the action as authorized by MCL 600.308a(1) and (6). Costs include a reasonable attorney fee.
(L) Procedure for Taxing Costs and Fees After Judgment.
(1) A judgment creditor considered a prevailing party to the action under subrule (B) may recover from the judgment debtor(s) the taxable costs and fees expended after a judgment is entered, including all taxable filing fees, service fees, certification fees, and any other costs, fees, and disbursements associated with postjudgment actions as allowed by MCL 600.2405.
(2) Until the judgment is satisfied, the judgment debtor may serve on the judgment creditor a request to review postjudgment taxable costs and fees.
(a) Within 28 days of receipt from a judgment debtor of a request to review postjudgment taxable costs and fees, the judgment creditor shall file with the court a memorandum of postjudgment taxable costs and fees and serve the same upon the judgment debtor. A memorandum of postjudgment taxable costs and fees shall include an itemized list of postjudgment taxable costs and fees. The memorandum must be verified by oath under MCR 1.109(D)(3).
(b) Within 28 days after receiving the memorandum of postjudgment taxable costs and fees from the judgment creditor, the judgment debtor may file a motion to review postjudgment taxable costs and fees. Upon receipt of a timely motion, the court shall review the memorandum filed by the judgment creditor and issue an order allowing or disallowing the postjudgment costs and fees. The review may be conducted at a hearing at the court’s discretion. If the court disallows the postjudgment costs and fees or otherwise amends them in favor of the judgment debtor, the court may order the judgment creditor to deduct from the judgment balance the amount of the motion fee paid by the judgment debtor under this rule.
(c) The judgment creditor shall deduct any costs or fees disallowed by the court within 28 days after receipt of an order from the court disallowing the same.
(d) Any error in adding costs or fees to the judgment balance by the judgment creditor or its attorney is not actionable unless there is an affirmative finding by the court that the costs and fees were added in bad faith.
Michigan tracks the orders that adopt and amend its Court Rules in a separate administrative record rather than printing a history note beneath each rule in the compiled rules text reproduced here. The text above is verified current through the source’s own May 1, 2026 update; for the full order-by-order history of this rule, see the Michigan Supreme Court’s rules and orders page.
Costs generally go to the prevailing party unless a statute, a court rule, or the court itself (for reasons stated in writing) says otherwise, and for an action or defense filed on or after October 1, 1986 that the court finds frivolous, costs are mandatory under MCL 600.2591. Figuring out who prevailed gets its own set of rules: a plaintiff who wins one of several separate judgments still counts as prevailing, a party who wins on a distinct issue or count in a multi-count case can recover costs for that issue even if the other side wins the case overall, a dismissed or successful defendant among several codefendants counts as prevailing even if the plaintiff wins against the others, and a circuit-court appellant who improves their position on appeal is deemed the prevailing party there. A plaintiff who recovers less than $100 in a contract or tort case is capped at recovering costs no greater than the damages themselves, and when a default or default judgment gets set aside, the order is generally conditioned on the defaulted party covering the other side's costs incurred relying on the default — unless jurisdiction was never acquired, in which case no costs can be imposed at all.
Taxing costs runs on its own procedural track: the prevailing party generally has 28 days after judgment (or after certain post-judgment motions are denied) to present the clerk a bill of costs, copies for the other parties, and a list of attorney or party addresses, with the other side getting 14 days to object before the clerk reviews everything and strikes anything that wasn't necessary; either side can then ask the court to review the clerk's decision within 7 days. Enforcement of taxed costs is automatically stayed pending the time to appeal, or through an actual appeal if one is filed. The bill of costs itself has to be verified, itemized, and, for witness fees, backed by an affidavit about distance traveled and days attended. A settlement is presumed to include whatever costs might otherwise have been taxable, and the rule adds special provisions for garnishment-proceeding costs, multiple-damages judgments, Headlee Amendment suits (which recover a reasonable attorney fee under MCL 600.308a), and a detailed postjudgment procedure letting a judgment creditor recover costs incurred after judgment, subject to the debtor's own right to challenge that postjudgment tally.