No, Michigan police cannot search your phone during a routine traffic stop without a warrant, consent, or a specific exception. This aligns with U.S. Supreme Court precedent protecting digital privacy under the Fourth Amendment.
Fourth Amendment Protections
The Fourth Amendment requires probable cause and typically a warrant for phone searches, as phones contain vast personal data unlike physical items. In Riley v. California (2014), the Supreme Court ruled warrantless phone searches incident to arrest are invalid without exigent circumstances. Michigan courts, including recent 2025 Supreme Court decisions like People v. Carson, reinforce that warrants must be particularized—no broad “search everything” orders.
Traffic Stop Specifics
Routine stops (e.g., speeding) allow brief detention but not phone access; officers need articulable probable cause for a vehicle search, which doesn’t extend to devices. Even if arrested, Michigan follows Riley: a warrant is “generally required” for phone contents, even post-seizure. Answering an incoming call on your phone counts as a search needing justification.
Exceptions Allowing Search
- Consent: Voluntarily agree (say “no” clearly to refuse).
- Exigent circumstances: Imminent evidence destruction or harm (rare in stops).
- Incident to arrest: Limited to immediate safety threats, not data extraction.
- Plain view or inventory: If impounded, but phone data still needs a warrant.
Your Rights and Tips
Stay calm, provide license/registration/insurance/proof of insurance, but assert “I do not consent to searches.” Refusal isn’t probable cause for escalation. If searched illegally, evidence may be suppressed—consult an attorney immediately. Michigan’s 2025 updates emphasize warrant specificity amid tech advances.
SOURCES :
- https://www.glgmichigan.com/illegal-search-and-seizure-criminal-defense-attorney-michigan/
- https://www.wemu.org/michigan-news/2025-08-01/michigan-supreme-court-strikes-down-warrantless-cell-phone-search












