Regulatory Friction

Definition

Regulatory Friction is the accumulation of legal, zoning, permitting, environmental, licensing, or procedural barriers that increase the difficulty, cost, uncertainty, or timeline associated with using a property as intended.

The friction is not always visible at purchase.

In many cases, the property itself appears usable while the surrounding approval environment becomes the actual constraint.

This is especially common in:

  • land purchases
  • waterfront property
  • short-term rentals
  • redevelopment projects
  • and properties requiring layered approvals

Where It Shows Up

  • Township-by-township zoning differences
  • Wetland and shoreline setbacks
  • Septic approval requirements
  • Driveway permitting
  • Land division review
  • STR licensing and caps
  • HOA approval structures
  • Site-plan review
  • Environmental review
  • Infrastructure limitations
  • Utility-extension requirements
  • Overlay districts
  • Variance processes

Why It Matters

Regulatory Friction changes how a property behaves in the real world.

It affects:

  • buyer confidence
  • transaction timelines
  • carrying costs
  • resale liquidity
  • financing certainty
  • operational flexibility
  • and long-term ownership experience

The market often discounts uncertainty and rewards clarity.

That is why:

  • approved land
  • transferable licenses
  • documented access
  • completed reviews
  • and properties with fewer unresolved regulatory questions

often command disproportionately stronger demand.

The friction itself becomes part of the asset.

Northern Michigan Context

Regulatory Friction is especially important across Northern Michigan because many desirable areas operate under overlapping layers of regulation and local control.

In places like Northport, Suttons Bay, and throughout Leelanau County, property behavior may be shaped by:

  • township zoning
  • village ordinances
  • environmental review
  • shoreline regulation
  • infrastructure limitations
  • STR licensing structures
  • conservation restrictions
  • and local governance priorities

This creates situations where two properties with similar:

  • acreage
  • location
  • waterfront
  • or square footage

may behave like entirely different assets once the approval environment is examined.

This is one reason the phrase:

“The jurisdiction matters as much as the property.”

has become increasingly true in Northern Michigan markets.

Related Concepts

Decision Impact

Regulatory Friction changes how a property must be evaluated before purchase.

A property may appear attractive based on:

  • scenery
  • location
  • waterfront
  • acreage
  • or projected income

while the actual ownership experience becomes shaped by:

  • approvals
  • permitting
  • licensing
  • review timelines
  • or procedural constraints

This is one reason sophisticated buyers increasingly pay a premium for properties where the major regulatory questions have already been solved.