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Commonly Asked Questions about Minnesota Landlord Tenant Law

Your landlord may not end your lease, raise your rent, or cut your services without proper written notice. Your landlord may not evict you or retaliate against you (get back at you) for complaining or standing up for your rights as a tenant. In Minneapolis and many other cities, a landlord has to have a rental license.
If there is no provision in the lease stating how much advance notice must be given to end the tenancy, the law says that written notice must be received by the other party at least one full rental period before the last day of the tenancy. In other words, the day before the last rent payment is due. [Minn. Stat.
Effective January 1, 2024, landlords cannot file an eviction action in court for non-payment of rent unless they first give the tenant a detailed written notice of an intention to file 14 days before filing. [Minn. Stat. 50B.
Effective Oct. 1, 2024, no contract or policy of long-term disability insurance limiting the duration of coverage for mental health or substance use disorders can be offered in Minnesota without a disclosure provided at the time of application that includes specific information about the limited duration of coverage.
A new tenant-landlord law protects renters by amending housing lease provisions, allowing tenants to organize to improve living conditions, and providing further protection for victims of domestic and sexual violence.
Thursday, April 18, 2024 The 2024 Tenants Rights Policy Bill includes provisions to safeguard tenants right to organize, protect tenant survivors of domestic violence, clarify tenants rights to emergency services, prohibit rental discrimination based on public assistance, and more.
Effective January 1, 2024, the landlord must issue a 14-day written notice before filing evictions for non-payment of rent. [Minn. Stat.
2. Timeline Lease Agreement / Type of TenancyNotice to Receive Week-to-week 7-Day Notice to Quit Month-to-month 30-Day Notice to Quit Other tenancies Duration between rental payments or 3 months, whichever is shorter Jun 13, 2024