Living in Porter Township (Cass County), Michigan: Pros, Cons, Cost of Living & Real Estate Snapshot
If you've ever found a real estate listing on Shavehead Lake Road or Baldwin Lake Drive and started wondering what the full picture looks like — the taxes, the schools, the commute, the lifestyle — you're in the right place.
Porter Township occupies the southeast corner of Cass County, and it is genuinely one of the most lake-rich townships in a county that's already famous for its water. The St. Joseph River forms the township's eastern and southern border, and within the township's 54.6 square miles you'll find Shavehead Lake, Baldwin Lake, Bair Lake, Long Lake, Coverdale Lake, and a collection of smaller private and semi-public lakes that define daily life here for a good portion of the year.
Porter Township is rural. There's no downtown, no Main Street, no coffee shop. What there is: space, water, a cluster of unincorporated communities along US-12 and other county roads, and a surprisingly strong economic profile considering the township's lack of commercial density. Let's break it all down.
Cost of Living in Porter Township, Michigan
According to BestPlaces.net, Cass County as a whole carries a Cost of Living Index of 84.8 compared to the U.S. national baseline of 100 — approximately 15% below the national average. Michigan statewide scores approximately 91.5.
Based on Census Reporter ACS 2023 5-year data, Porter Township presents a distinctly strong economic profile — the highest median household income of any township profiled in this Cass County series:
- Median household income: approximately $81,916 — about 15% above the Michigan statewide median of $71,149 and about 20% above the Cass County median of $68,011
- Per capita income: approximately $56,165 — about 45% above the Cass County per capita of $38,544 and about 42% above the Michigan per capita of $39,538
- Poverty rate: approximately 7.8% — about 40% below both the Cass County rate of 13.2% and the Michigan rate of 13.1%
- Median age: approximately 51.9 years — the highest of any township in this series, and roughly 30% above the Michigan median of 40.1
The per capita income is the most notable figure: at approximately $56,165, it runs substantially above both Michigan and Cass County averages. The poverty rate of approximately 7.8% — the lowest of any township profiled in this series — reflects a financially stable community composition. Per Niche.com, most residents own their homes and many retirees live in Porter Township.
The high median age and income levels, combined with the low poverty rate, suggest Porter Township has attracted and retained a significant concentration of financially established, property-owning households — many likely drawn by the lake access and rural character of the area.
Day-to-day expenses track with southwest Michigan regional averages. All services require a vehicle; the township is car-dependent with no public transit. Healthcare is available in Constantine, Three Rivers, South Bend, and the broader Michiana regional medical system.
Real Estate & Housing Overview
Porter Township is a lake-country real estate market, which means pricing is largely driven by water access — and values reflect it.
According to Niche.com, homes in Porter Township have a median value of approximately $310,600. The median rent price is approximately $1,018 per month per Niche — notably higher than other Cass County townships in this series, consistent with a market dominated by waterfront and water-access properties.
For county context, RocketHomes reports the Cass County median sold price at approximately $232,500 as of August 2024, based on Realcomp II Ltd. MLS data — placing Porter Township's median home value approximately 33% above the county median, driven by the concentration of lakefront and lake-access inventory on Shavehead Lake, Baldwin Lake, Bair Lake, Long Lake, and other waters.
Per Loux & Hayden Realty's community profile for Union, MI, Porter Township is described as "a very rural area dotted with lakes that provide year-round recreation for residents, from boating and swimming in summer months to ice-fishing competitions in the winter" — a characterization that captures both the lifestyle and the real estate market's driving forces accurately.
According to Wikipedia, there were 2,040 housing units in the township at an average density of 39.4 per square mile at the 2000 census — reflecting the rural, spread-out character of the community. More recent Census Reporter data places the household count at approximately 1,636, a figure that illustrates the seasonal versus year-round dynamic common in lake townships, where a meaningful number of housing units are used as seasonal properties rather than full-time residences.
The housing stock in Porter Township includes:
- Lakefront and lake-access properties on Shavehead Lake, Baldwin Lake, Bair Lake, Long Lake, and other waters — the market's price leaders, ranging from original cottages to updated year-round waterfront homes
- Rural residential acreage — farmhouses, ranches, and country properties on generous lots, typically on well and septic
- Unincorporated community properties in and around Union and Williamsville — older single-family homes at lower price points than the lakefront market
Specific township-level MLS trend data (days on market, list-to-sale ratios) for Porter Township alone was not available at time of publication through public RocketHomes reporting at the township level. Readers are encouraged to verify current market conditions directly through a licensed Michigan Realtor with access to Realcomp II Ltd. MLS data.








