Michigan winter has officially reached its favorite stage: confusing, icy, and yelling conflicting information at us from every direction. One headline says statewide salt shortage, while another says no salt shortage. Both are technically right, which feels very on brand for The Mitten State.

Statewide Salt Supply vs Local Shortages

A salt truck turns onto a snowy road.
Getty Images
loading...

So, what's really happening? Michigan isn't out of road salt, but we've been burning through it like it's free popcorn. CBS News reports Monroe County alone used more than 7,500 tons of it through January 2026, matching an entire winter's worth from last year. Oakland County says usage has doubled or even tripled compared to recent winters. So while everyone may still have road salt reserves, they're opting to hoard it for when it gets "really bad."

RELATED: How Cold Weather Affects Michigan's Road Salt Performance

That's why counties are cutting off extra requests from smaller communities and why commercial plow companies are firing off emails that either say, "Congrats, you're done," or "Watch your step, we're holding back on salt."

The Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) insists there's no statewide panic button being smashed. Bridge Michigan reports the state has ordered nearly 200,000 tons and can order more. But extreme cold makes salt about as effective as slamming on the brakes on black ice.

How This Affects Drivers

A salt truck being loaded
Getty Images
loading...

What does this mean for Michigan drivers? Expect snow-covered side streets, slower plowing, and an extra-spicy commute. Slow down, watch for the other guy, and assume every road is plotting against you. In other words: Nothing's changed.

RELATED: Michigan's 10 Deadliest Roads in 2026 Revealed in New Study

This isn't a salt-pocalypse. It's a perfect storm of brutal cold, relentless snow, and strained supply chains. Welcome to winter in Michigan.

Michigan Deer Crashes 2024: See Where Your County Ranks

In 2023, Kent County ranked #1 for car-deer collisions in the state. Using the latest available data from the Michigan State Police (MSP) and the Michigan Office of Highway Safety Planning's (OHSP) Michigan Traffic Facts, here's a county-by-county countdown to 2024's worst county of deer-vehicle collisions.

Gallery Credit: Scott Clow

The 10 Most Dangerous Roundabouts in Michigan for 2026

Michigan Auto Law analyzed official crash data from the Michigan State Police Traffic Crash Reporting Unit and ranked roundabouts by total reported crashes. The more accidents logged, the higher the danger level, earning these intersections a spot on Michigan’s most dreaded driving list. Here's Michigan's 10 Most Dangerous Roundabouts for 2026

Gallery Credit: Scott Clow

More From 97.5 NOW FM