Michigan's congressional districts
Michigan is divided into 14 congressional districts, each represented by a member of the United States House of Representatives.[2]

The districts are currently represented in the 116th United States Congress by 7 Democrats, 6 Republicans, and one Libertarian.
Current districts and members
List of members of the House delegation, their time in office, district maps, and the districts' political ratings according to the CPVI. The delegation has 14 members, including 6 Republicans, 7 Democrats, and 1 Libertarian.
District | Incumbent | District | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Member (Residence) |
Party | Time in office[lower-alpha 1] | CPVI | Location | |
1st | ![]() Jack Bergman (Watersmeet) |
Republican | since January 3, 2017 | R+9 | ![]() |
2nd | ![]() Bill Huizenga (Zeeland) |
Republican | since January 3, 2011 | R+9 | ![]() |
3rd | ![]() Justin Amash (Cascade Township) |
Libertarian | since January 3, 2011 | R+6 | ![]() |
4th | ![]() John Moolenaar (Midland) |
Republican | since January 3, 2015 | R+10 | ![]() |
5th | ![]() Dan Kildee (Flint Township) |
Democratic | since January 3, 2013 | D+5 | ![]() |
6th | ![]() Fred Upton (St. Joseph) |
Republican | since January 3, 1987 | R+4 | ![]() |
7th | ![]() Tim Walberg (Tipton) |
Republican | since January 3, 2011 | R+7 | ![]() |
8th | ![]() Elissa Slotkin (Holly) |
Democratic | since January 3, 2019 | R+4 | ![]() |
9th | ![]() Andy Levin (Bloomfield Township) |
Democratic | since January 3, 2019 | D+4 | ![]() |
10th | ![]() Paul Mitchell (Dryden Township) |
Republican | since January 3, 2017 | R+13 | ![]() |
11th | ![]() Haley Stevens (Rochester Hills) |
Democratic | since January 3, 2019 | R+4 | ![]() |
12th | ![]() Debbie Dingell (Dearborn) |
Democratic | since January 3, 2015 | D+14 | ![]() |
13th | ![]() Rashida Tlaib (Detroit) |
Democratic | since January 3, 2019 | D+32 | ![]() |
14th | ![]() Brenda Lawrence (Southfield) |
Democratic | since January 3, 2015 | D+30 | ![]() |
Historical district boundaries
Below is a table of United States congressional district boundary maps for the State of Michigan, presented chronologically forward.[3] All redistricting events that took place in Michigan in the decades between 1973 and 2013 are shown.
Year | Statewide map | Congressional delegation |
---|---|---|
1973–1982 | ![]() |
1/3/1973–1/3/1974: 7 Democrats, 12 Republicans
1/3/1974–1/3/1975: 9 Democrats, 10 Republicans 1/3/1975–1/3/1977: 12 Democrats, 7 Republicans 1/3/1977–1/3/1979: 11 Democrats, 8 Republicans 1/3/1979–1/3/1981: 13 Democrats, 6 Republicans 1/3/1981–1/3/1983: 12 Democrats, 7 Republicans |
1983–1992 | ![]() |
1/3/1983–1/3/1985: 12 Democrats, 6 Republicans
1/3/1985–1/3/1987: 11 Democrats, 7 Republicans 1/3/1987–1/3/1989: 11 Democrats, 7 Republicans 1/3/1989–1/3/1991: 11 Democrats, 7 Republicans 1/3/1991–1/3/1993: 11 Democrats, 7 Republicans |
1993–2002 | ![]() Note: The orange 6th is mislabeled; it should read 13th. |
1/3/1993–1/3/1995: 10 Democrats, 6 Republicans 1/3/1995–1/3/1997: 9 Democrats, 7 Republicans 1/3/1997–1/3/1999: 10 Democrats, 6 Republicans 1/3/1999-1/3/2001: 10 Democrats, 6 Republicans 1/3/2001-1/3/2003: 9 Democrats, 7 Republicans |
2003–2013 | ![]() |
1/3/2003-1/3/2005: 6 Democrats, 9 Republicans
1/3/2005-1/3/2007: 6 Democrats, 9 Republicans 1/3/2007-1/3/2009: 6 Democrats, 9 Republicans 1/3/2009-1/3/11: 8 Democrats, 7 Republicans 1/3/2011–7/6/2012: 6 Democrats, 9 Republicans 7/6/2012-11/6/2012: 6 Democrats, 8 Republicans, 1 Vacant seat 11/6/2012-1/3/2013: 7 Democrats, 8 Republicans |
Since 2013 | ![]() |
1/3/2013–1/3/2015: 5 Democrats, 9 Republicans
1/3/2015–1/3/2017: 5 Democrats, 9 Republicans 1/3/2017-1/3/2019: 5 Democrats, 9 Republicans 1/3/2019-present: 7 Democrats, 7 Republicans |
Obsolete districts
- Michigan's at-large congressional district
- Michigan's 15th congressional district
- Michigan's 16th congressional district
- Michigan's 17th congressional district
- Michigan's 18th congressional district
- Michigan's 19th congressional district
See also
Notes
- "Time in office" reflects each member's time since becoming a member, not the member's time since becoming a member for the current district. Redistricting commonly results in a district being moved elsewhere in the state and its representative beginning to represent a different district in the same location.
References
- "The national atlas". nationalatlas.gov. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved February 22, 2014.
- "Directory of Representatives". The United States House of Representatives. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
- "Digital Boundary Definitions of United States Congressional Districts, 1789–2012". Retrieved October 18, 2014.