Criminal Defense

Assault Charges in Michigan: What You're Actually Facing

Josh Kaplan
Josh Kaplan, Esq.
Founding Partner — Criminal Defense
March 2026 6 min read
Quick Answer

Michigan assault charges range from a 93-day misdemeanor (simple assault) to a life felony (assault with intent to murder). The severity depends on whether a weapon was used, the extent of injury, the victim's identity, and the defendant's intent. No physical contact is required for an assault charge — threatening conduct alone is enough. An attorney can often negotiate reductions, pursue diversion, or raise self-defense even before a case goes to trial.

Being charged with assault in Michigan covers an enormous spectrum. A shove during an argument and a stabbing are both technically assault, but they carry vastly different consequences. Understanding what charge you're actually facing — and what the prosecutor has to prove — is the first step to building a defense.

This article explains Michigan's assault statutes, the penalties at each level, and the defenses that are most likely to matter in your case. If you're in Oakland County or the surrounding Southeast Michigan area and facing an assault charge, here's what you need to know.

Michigan Does Not Require Physical Contact for Assault

This surprises many people. In Michigan, assault is an intentional act that causes another person to reasonably fear an immediate, harmful, or offensive touching. No contact has to occur. Raising a fist at someone, threatening them while advancing toward them, or pointing a gun at them — all constitute assault.

Battery is the actual physical contact — hitting, shoving, grabbing, or any unwanted harmful touching. In Michigan, the statutes typically charge these together as "assault and battery," but understanding the distinction matters: if there was no contact, the prosecution must still prove the victim actually and reasonably feared imminent contact.

The Assault Charge Ladder: From Misdemeanor to Life Felony

Michigan law creates a hierarchy of assault offenses based on the use of weapons, the severity of injury, the identity of the victim, and the defendant's intent. Here is how each level works:

Simple Assault and Battery — MCL 750.81

The baseline charge for unwanted physical contact or placing someone in fear of contact. A first offense is a 93-day misdemeanor. A second or subsequent offense, or assault against a pregnant person, is a misdemeanor punishable by up to one year. While it sounds minor, even a misdemeanor assault conviction can affect employment, housing, and firearm rights.

Aggravated Assault — MCL 750.81a

Assault that causes serious or aggravated injury without use of a weapon. This is a one-year misdemeanor. "Serious injury" typically means injury requiring medical treatment — lacerations, fractures, or significant bruising beyond minor soreness. The absence of a weapon keeps this at the misdemeanor level, but the injury element elevates it above simple assault.

Felonious Assault — MCL 750.82

Assault committed with a dangerous weapon — a firearm, knife, club, or any object used in a manner capable of causing death or great bodily harm — without intending to kill or commit great bodily harm. This is a 4-year felony. In a weapon-free school zone or when committed in the presence of a minor under 16, the maximum doubles to 8 years.

Whether an object is a "dangerous weapon" is often contested. A baseball bat used as a weapon qualifies; a pencil ordinarily does not — but the manner of use can change that analysis. Your attorney can challenge this element in many cases.

Assault with Intent to Do Great Bodily Harm — MCL 750.84

This charge requires proof that the defendant specifically intended to cause serious physical injury — something beyond ordinary battery. Broken bones, deep lacerations, injuries requiring surgery or hospitalization typically meet this threshold. It is a 10-year felony and is among the most common serious assault charges prosecutors file in Oakland County when a weapon was used but the victim survived without life-threatening injury.

Assault with Intent to Commit Murder — MCL 750.83

The most serious assault charge. The prosecution must prove specific intent to kill. This is a life felony, meaning the sentence can be life imprisonment. It typically arises in cases involving firearms, stabbings, or prolonged attacks where the evidence supports an inference that death was the goal.

Michigan Assault Penalties at a Glance

Charge Statute Level Max Penalty
Simple Assault/Battery (1st offense) MCL 750.81 Misdemeanor 93 days
Simple Assault/Battery (2nd offense) MCL 750.81 Misdemeanor 1 year
Aggravated Assault (serious injury, no weapon) MCL 750.81a Misdemeanor 1 year
Felonious Assault (dangerous weapon) MCL 750.82 Felony 4 years
Felonious Assault in school zone / near minor MCL 750.82 Felony 8 years
Assault w/ Intent to Do Great Bodily Harm MCL 750.84 Felony 10 years
Assault w/ Intent to Murder MCL 750.83 Felony Life

Protected Classes: When the Victim's Identity Increases the Penalty

Michigan law significantly enhances penalties when assault targets certain individuals:

Law enforcement and first responders. Assaulting a police officer, firefighter, paramedic, or other emergency personnel performing their duties under MCL 750.81d carries up to 2 years for a first offense, up to 4 years for assault causing injury, and up to 10 years for assault causing serious injury.

Healthcare workers. Assaulting a nurse, doctor, or other healthcare professional providing treatment is a 93-day misdemeanor escalating to felony treatment for repeat offenders or serious injury cases under MCL 750.81e.

Domestic assault. When the victim has a qualifying domestic relationship — spouse, former spouse, person sharing a child, household resident, or dating partner — charges proceed under the Domestic Violence statute (MCL 750.81). Enhanced penalties apply for repeat offenses. See our separate article on domestic violence charges for full coverage of that area.

Self-Defense in Michigan Assault Cases

Michigan's Self-Defense Act (MCL 780.972) codifies the right to use force to defend yourself or others. The key elements are:

You may use non-deadly force if you honestly and reasonably believe it is necessary to protect yourself or another from imminent unlawful physical force. You may use deadly force if you honestly and reasonably believe it is necessary to prevent imminent death, great bodily harm, or a sexual assault.

Michigan has no "duty to retreat" when you are not the initial aggressor. This is sometimes called a "stand your ground" principle. However, the force used must be proportionate to the threat — you cannot use deadly force to respond to a shove.

Self-defense is an affirmative defense — you raise it at trial, and the prosecution must then disprove it beyond a reasonable doubt. This is a powerful defense in cases where the alleged victim was the initial aggressor or where the defendant was defending a third party.

**Important:** If you told police "I hit him but I was defending myself," that statement can be used against you. Do not make statements to police without an attorney present. The facts of who started what are often disputed — an attorney can investigate and present your version effectively.

Can You Get an Assault Charge Expunged in Michigan?

Michigan's expanded expungement law (effective 2021) allows most assault misdemeanors to be set aside after a waiting period — typically 3 years from sentencing for misdemeanors. Certain assault convictions are excluded from expungement, including assaults causing serious injury, assault with a dangerous weapon (felonious assault), and any assault conviction where the victim was a minor.

Felony assault convictions can potentially be expunged under the same 2021 law if they are not listed as excluded offenses, but the process requires a formal petition and hearing. The prosecutor and victim have the right to object. In Oakland County, judges exercise substantial discretion in these hearings.

Common Defenses to Assault Charges

Every case is different, but several defenses come up frequently in Michigan assault prosecutions:

Self-defense or defense of others. As described above, this is the most common defense in assault cases where there was a confrontation. The question is always whether your belief in the need to use force was honest and reasonable.

Lack of intent. Assault requires an intentional act. Accidental contact — bumping into someone, reaching for something and making unintended contact — is not assault. If the alleged contact was accidental, the intent element fails.

No reasonable apprehension. For assault without battery, the prosecution must prove the alleged victim actually and reasonably feared imminent contact. Words alone (absent threatening conduct) are typically not enough for an assault charge in Michigan.

Mutual combat. When both parties agreed to fight, consent can be a defense to simple assault and battery charges, though it does not apply to more serious injuries or weapons charges.

Witness credibility and identification. In many assault cases, the evidence comes down to one person's word against another's. Inconsistencies in witness statements, prior false reports, motive to fabricate, or inability to identify the defendant can all undermine the prosecution's case.

Whether the object was a "dangerous weapon." For felonious assault, the prosecution must prove the object used was actually capable of causing death or great bodily harm in the manner it was used. This element is contested more often than you might expect.

What to Do If You've Been Charged With Assault in Michigan

Do not speak to police or investigators without an attorney. Anything you say — even an explanation that seems exculpatory — can be taken out of context and used against you. The right to remain silent and the right to counsel exist precisely for situations like this.

Contact a criminal defense attorney as quickly as possible. Early intervention matters: attorneys can sometimes resolve cases at the charging stage before a formal complaint is filed, preserve surveillance footage or other evidence that might disappear, and identify weaknesses in the prosecution's case before the defense strategy is locked in.

In Oakland County, where Dizik Kaplan practices, courts take assault charges seriously at all levels. Having experienced local counsel who knows the prosecutors and judges makes a meaningful difference in outcomes — from charge reductions and diversion to trial.

What is the difference between assault and assault and battery in Michigan?
In Michigan, assault is an act that places another person in reasonable apprehension of an immediate harmful or offensive contact — no physical contact is required. Assault and battery occurs when that threatened contact actually happens. Both are chargeable together or separately. Simple assault and battery under MCL 750.81 is a 93-day misdemeanor for a first offense, but the charge escalates significantly when a weapon is involved, the victim is in a protected class, or serious injury results.
What is felonious assault in Michigan?
Felonious assault under MCL 750.82 is assault committed with a dangerous weapon — a gun, knife, club, or any object used in a manner capable of causing death or serious injury — without intending to commit murder or great bodily harm. It is a felony carrying up to 4 years in prison. In a weapon-free school zone or in the presence of a minor under 16, the penalty doubles to up to 8 years.
What does 'assault with intent to do great bodily harm' mean?
Assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder (MCL 750.84) requires proof that the defendant intended to cause serious physical injury — broken bones, significant lacerations, or injuries requiring hospitalization. It is a 10-year felony. This charge is more serious than felonious assault because it requires proof of a specific intent to cause severe harm, not merely that a dangerous weapon was used.
Can an assault charge be dropped if the victim doesn't want to press charges?
No. In Michigan, charging decisions belong to the prosecutor, not the victim. Once a police report is filed, the prosecutor decides whether to bring charges regardless of the victim's wishes. Victims may choose not to cooperate with the prosecution, which can affect the strength of the state's case, but it does not automatically result in dismissal. In domestic assault cases especially, prosecutors often proceed even when the victim requests the charges be dropped.
What are the defenses to assault charges in Michigan?
Common defenses include self-defense (MCL 780.972 allows reasonable force to prevent imminent unlawful force), defense of others, lack of intent (accidental contact is not a crime), consent in certain contact-sport contexts, and challenging witness credibility or identification. Whether an object qualifies as a "dangerous weapon" under felonious assault can also be contested. The specific defense depends heavily on the facts of your case.
What is the penalty for aggravated assault in Michigan?
Michigan does not use the label "aggravated assault" in its statutes. What is commonly called aggravated assault corresponds to several distinct charges: assault causing serious injury without a weapon (MCL 750.81a) is a 1-year misdemeanor; felonious assault with a dangerous weapon (MCL 750.82) is a 4-year felony; assault with intent to do great bodily harm (MCL 750.84) is a 10-year felony; assault with intent to murder (MCL 750.83) is a life felony. The specific charge depends on what weapon was involved and what harm or intent the evidence shows.
Related Articles

Facing Assault Charges in Michigan?

Josh Kaplan defends assault cases at every level — from misdemeanor battery to serious felony charges — in Oakland County and throughout Southeast Michigan. Early representation matters. Contact us for a confidential consultation.

(248) 712-1462 — Call Now