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← All articles Homeowner Guide · Michigan · 5 min read

Found a Dead Animal in Your Yard in Michigan? Here's Exactly What to Do

Published: June 29, 2026 · Category: Homeowner Guides · 5 min read

Finding a dead animal on your property is unpleasant — and in Michigan’s warm months it becomes a health and odor problem fast. Here’s exactly what to do, in order, whether the animal is in your yard, under a deck, in a crawl space, or inside a wall.

1. Don’t touch it with bare hands

Dead animals can carry bacteria, parasites, and zoonotic disease, and decomposing carcasses attract flies that lay eggs within hours. Keep children and pets away. If you must handle a small carcass yourself, wear disposable gloves, double-bag it in sealed plastic, and wash thoroughly afterward.

2. Act within 24–48 hours

Decomposition and odor accelerate quickly in Michigan summers. Within a day or two a carcass can produce strong odor, fly activity, and fluid that stains soil, concrete, or sub-flooring. The sooner it’s removed and the area sanitized, the smaller the cleanup.

3. Know Michigan’s disposal rules before you bin it

Whether you can put a dead animal in household trash, and how a pet must be buried, is governed by Michigan law and local ordinances — and the rules differ for wild animals, pets, and livestock. We break down the specifics (including Michigan BODA Act disposal provisions and pet-burial depth) on our dead animal FAQ. When in doubt, don’t send a large carcass to the curb — confirm the rule first.

4. Call a professional for anything you can’t safely reach

Handle it yourself only if it’s a small animal in the open that you can bag easily. Call a licensed wildlife removal pro when the animal is: in a wall, attic, crawl space, or duct; under a deck, porch, or shed; large (raccoon, deer, opossum); decomposed or fluid-soaked; or you simply don’t want to deal with it. A pro recovers the carcass, sanitizes and deodorizes the area, and disposes of it in compliance with Michigan rules.

5. Don’t skip the sanitizing step

Removing the carcass is only half the job. The spot where an animal died harbors bacteria and odor-causing residue; flies and maggots can persist after the body is gone. Proper cleanup includes enzyme treatment and deodorizing so the smell — and the health risk — actually goes away.

Need it gone today?

Michigan Dead Animal Removal connects you with licensed Michigan wildlife operators for fast recovery, sanitizing, and code-compliant disposal across the state. Request a free quote →

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