Minnesota is a relatively tenant-protective state, and its rules are in Chapter 504B of the statutes. Source of income (“status with regard to public assistance”) is protected under the Minnesota Human Rights Act, and Minneapolis and St. Paul require landlords to accept Housing Choice Vouchers; statewide, whether a landlord must accept a voucher is unsettled (a 2010 appellate ruling said not), so protection is strongest in those two cities. Since January 1, 2024, landlords must give a detailed 14-day notice before filing a nonpayment eviction. There is no statewide rent control, but St. Paul has local rent stabilization (Minneapolis voters authorized one, but the city has not enacted it). The Minnesota Housing Finance Agency (MN Housing) funds affordable housing. This page covers the statewide rules, the eviction timeline, and links to every Minnesota city we cover.

Quick numbers to write down:

Public Housing & Vouchers in Minnesota

Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers and public housing are run by local authorities — the Minneapolis Public Housing Authority, the St. Paul Public Housing Agency, Metro HRA, and others. MN Housing finances affordable apartments and allocates Low-Income Housing Tax Credits — search HUD’s LIHTC database or read how to find LIHTC housing. Because Minnesota protects source of income (below), a landlord cannot refuse your voucher.

Apply to several authorities at once. Use HUD’s PHA directory or our how to find your PHA and how to apply for Section 8 guides. City waitlist status is on the city pages below.

Source of Income Protection

The Minnesota Human Rights Act protects “status with regard to public assistance.” Minneapolis and St. Paul go further with local ordinances that require landlords to accept Housing Choice Vouchers. Statewide, whether a landlord must accept a voucher is unsettled: a 2010 appellate ruling (Edwards v. Hopkins Plaza) held that a landlord may decline Section 8, and the Minnesota Department of Human Rights disputes that and has asked the Legislature to clarify it. Separately, in 2025 the Minnesota Supreme Court held that a landlord who keeps accepting rent after learning of a lease violation waives the right to evict on it — a protection that applies to subsidized tenants too. File a complaint with the Minnesota Department of Human Rights (1-833-454-0148) and read our source-of-income protections guide.

Rent Control in Minnesota

There is no statewide rent control, but Minnesota lets voters adopt it locally. St. Paul voters passed a rent-stabilization ordinance in 2021 (a cap on annual increases, since amended with exemptions), and Minneapolis voters authorized the city council to create one. If you rent in either city, check the current local rules; elsewhere, your protection comes from your lease and required notice.

Emergency Rental Assistance in Minnesota

See our emergency rental assistance guide for the national picture.

Minnesota Tenant Law: Key Protections at a Glance

Quick Reference: Minnesota (MN)

Security deposits

Minnesota sets no cap on the deposit amount, but the landlord must pay 1% annual interest (Minn. Stat. 504B.178) and return the deposit with an itemized statement within 21 days of the tenancy ending. If the landlord keeps it in bad faith, you may recover the amount wrongfully withheld plus a penalty equal to that amount. See how to recover your security deposit.

Eviction process, the 14-day notice & expungement

Self-help eviction is illegal; the landlord must go to court and only the sheriff can remove you. Since January 1, 2024, the process starts with a stronger notice:

Minnesota also lets tenants ask the court to expunge (seal) an eviction record in many situations (Minn. Stat. 484.014), which protects your future applications — ask about it. An uncontested case commonly runs about three to six weeks from the notice. Call the HOME Line tenant hotline (612-728-5767) and read how to avoid eviction.

Other Housing Programs in Minnesota

Major Minnesota Cities We Cover

Where to Get Help in Minnesota

Free advice & legal aid: the HOME Line tenant hotline (612-728-5767) gives free advice statewide; Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid and LawHelpMN handle eviction defense.

Source-of-income / discrimination: the Minnesota Department of Human Rights (1-833-454-0148) enforces the statewide protection.

State housing agency: MN Housing for vouchers, LIHTC, and programs.

Find your local PHA: HUD’s PHA directory or our how to find your PHA guide.

211 helpline: dial 2-1-1 or visit 211.org for rental help, shelters, and utility assistance.

HUD fair housing: file at hud.gov/reporthousingdiscrimination or call 1-800-669-9777.

Next Steps

Not sure where to start? Our Where to Start tool routes you to the right mix of Minnesota programs in about two minutes.

If a landlord refused your voucher, that violates state law — file with the MN Department of Human Rights (1-833-454-0148). For a nonpayment case, call the HOME Line (612-728-5767), ask about expungement, and read eviction prevention.