Residency Laws in Minnesota (2026): Your Money, Your Vote, Your Rules
Most people think residency is simple. You live somewhere, you’re a resident. Right?
Not in Minnesota. The state has different residency rules depending on what you’re doing. Taxes, college tuition, voting, they all have their own requirements. And honestly, getting it wrong can cost you thousands of dollars.
Let’s break down exactly what you need to know.
What Does “Residency” Even Mean?

Here’s the thing. Minnesota doesn’t have just one definition of residency.
The state uses different rules for different purposes. Tax residency is different from tuition residency. Voting residency has its own requirements. They’re all separate systems with separate rules.
Sound complicated? It’s actually not once you understand the basics.
Tax Residency: The Big One
This is probably the most important residency rule. It affects how much you pay in state income tax.
Minnesota has two ways to determine if you’re a tax resident. Both can catch you even if you think you’ve moved away.
The 183-Day Rule
Stay with me here. This one’s pretty straightforward.
If you spend 183 days or more in Minnesota during a year, you might be a tax resident. But there’s a catch. You also need to maintain an “abode” in the state.
An abode means a home suitable for year-round living. It could be a house you own or an apartment you rent. Even a cabin counts if it has cooking and bathing facilities.
Here’s what many people miss. Any part of a day counts as a full day. Drive through Minnesota for work? That’s a day. Visit for a wedding? Another day.
Keep good records. Calendars, receipts, credit card statements, plane tickets. You’ll need proof if the state ever questions your residency.
The Domicile Test
Okay, this one’s more subjective.
Your domicile is where you intend to make your permanent home. It’s the place you consider home base. The place you plan to return to after being away.
Minnesota looks at 26 different factors to determine your domicile. Honestly, that’s a lot. But some matter more than others.
The big ones include:
- Where your family lives
- Where you work
- Where you own property
- Where you’re registered to vote
- Where your driver’s license is from
- Where your kids go to school
- Where you go to church or worship
- Where you have bank accounts
- Where you see doctors and dentists
Your actions matter more than your words. You can say you moved to Florida all you want. But if your spouse and kids are still in Minnesota, the state will probably consider you a Minnesota resident.
Pretty much everything counts except two things. Minnesota won’t consider where you donate to charity. And as of 2017, they don’t care where your financial advisors or accountants are located.
What If You’re Trying to Leave?
Wondering if you can escape Minnesota taxes by moving?
It’s possible. But you need to do it right.
First, you must physically move to another state. Second, you need to prove you intend to stay there permanently. That means changing everything. Driver’s license, voter registration, car registration, the works.
Keeping a home in Minnesota while claiming residency elsewhere? Bad idea. The state will likely still consider you a resident.
Many people assume they can just spend six months and a day somewhere else. They think that’s a safe harbor. It’s not.
Minnesota doesn’t have a safe harbor rule. Even if you’re gone most of the year, you could still be a Minnesota resident if your domicile is there.
Tax Consequences
Here’s why this matters so much.
Minnesota residents pay state income tax on all their income. Everywhere they earn it. Work in California but live in Minnesota? You pay Minnesota tax on those California wages.
Nonresidents only pay Minnesota tax on income earned in Minnesota. Big difference.
Get this wrong and you could face audits, penalties, and interest. The Minnesota Department of Revenue actively audits people suspected of misreporting residency.
Tuition Residency: College Students Listen Up

College tuition costs are no joke in Minnesota.
For 2025-26, resident students at the University of Minnesota pay about $8,066 annually. Nonresidents pay around $19,509. That’s over $11,000 more per year.
Trust me, this matters.
The Basic Requirements
To qualify for resident tuition, you need two things.
First, you must live in Minnesota for at least one calendar year before your first day of class. Second, your main reason for being in Minnesota can’t be to attend college.
That second part trips people up. If you move to Minnesota just for school, you won’t qualify. You need to establish Minnesota as your actual home.
Most dependent students qualify based on their parents’ residency. If your parent or legal guardian lives in Minnesota when you apply, you’re considered a resident.
How to Prove Residency
Students have the burden of proof. You need to show Minnesota is your real home.
The state looks at things like:
- Where you’re employed
- Where you’re registered to vote
- Where your driver’s license is from
- Where you file taxes
- Where you have bank accounts
- Where you receive mail
Honestly, the more evidence you have, the better. One or two items won’t cut it. You need to show a pattern.
Special Exceptions
Some people get resident tuition rates automatically. Pretty nice deal.
Current and former military members qualify. So do their spouses and dependent children. Veterans don’t even need to meet the residency requirements.
Students who attended a Minnesota high school for three years also qualify. They need to graduate from a Minnesota high school or get their GED in Minnesota.
Migrant farmworkers who’ve worked in Minnesota for at least two years over five years qualify too.
Reciprocity Agreements
Hold on, this gets interesting.
Minnesota has tuition reciprocity agreements with some neighboring states. Students from these states pay reduced tuition rates.
Wisconsin, North Dakota, and some other states have these agreements. But reciprocity doesn’t make you a Minnesota resident. It just affects your tuition rate.
Note: South Dakota’s reciprocity agreement ended in 2024. The University of Minnesota honored it through spring 2025 for enrolled students.
Can You Change Your Status?
Not sure what counts as establishing residency?
If you move to Minnesota and work full-time for a year, that usually works. But you can’t be enrolled full-time during that year. Five credits or less per term is the limit.
Taking a gap year to work in Minnesota? That could qualify you for resident tuition later. Just make sure you’re working substantially and not primarily focused on school.
Voting Residency: Your Democratic Rights
Voting residency is actually the simplest one.
You must be a Minnesota resident for 20 days before Election Day. Yep, just 20 days. That’s it.
Who Can Vote?
You’re eligible to vote in Minnesota if you meet these requirements:
You’re 18 years old or older on Election Day. You’re a U.S. citizen. You’ve lived in Minnesota for at least 20 days. You’re not currently incarcerated for a felony conviction. A court hasn’t revoked your right to vote.
Confused about the felony rule? Let me break it down.
If you’re on probation or parole, you can vote. If you completed your sentence, you can vote. Only current incarceration prevents voting.
What Counts as Residence?
Your residence is where you live and sleep regularly.
It’s the place you consider home. The place you intend to return to when you’re away temporarily.
Living in a dorm? That’s your residence. Staying in a shelter? That counts too. Minnesota allows people experiencing homelessness to use the location where they sleep as their address.
College students can vote where they go to school or at their parents’ address. Their choice. But they can only vote in one place.
Registering to Vote
Minnesota makes registration pretty easy.
You can register online, by mail, or in person. You can even register on Election Day at your polling place.
Online registration requires a Minnesota driver’s license or state ID. Or you can use the last four digits of your Social Security number.
Not registered yet? Don’t worry. Election Day registration is available. Just bring proof of residence to your polling place.
Proof of Residence
Wondering what counts as proof?
A valid Minnesota driver’s license works. So does a state ID or learner’s permit. Tribal IDs with your photo and address count too.
Don’t have any of those? You can use a photo ID plus a recent bill. Utility bills, bank statements, rent statements all work. The bill just needs to be dated within 30 days of the election.
A registered voter from your precinct can even vouch for you. They sign an oath confirming your address. Easy.
What About Temporary Residents?
Living in Minnesota temporarily? This applies to you.
If you’re just here temporarily, you can’t vote in Minnesota. You need to establish actual residence with intent to stay.
Moving to Minnesota right before an election? If you’ve been here less than 20 days, you can’t vote a full ballot. But you can cast a presidential ballot if you were a Minnesota resident before.
Public Assistance Residency

Need help with benefits? Here’s what you should know.
Different assistance programs have different residency rules. SNAP (food stamps) has the easiest requirements.
SNAP Benefits
For SNAP, you just need to be present in Minnesota.
As long as you’re not on vacation and you’re not getting SNAP elsewhere, you’re good. A verbal statement that you live in Minnesota is enough.
People experiencing homelessness qualify without a physical address. Residents of domestic violence shelters qualify even if they got benefits elsewhere that month.
Cash Assistance Programs
Programs like MFIP and General Assistance have stricter rules.
For most cash programs, you need to live in Minnesota with intent to stay. Some programs require 30 days of residence before you qualify.
People in temporary housing still qualify. Coming to Minnesota for a job works too. You don’t need to be employed, just show you intend to remain in Minnesota.
Temporary Absences
Taking a trip? That’s usually fine.
Temporary absences don’t cause you to lose Minnesota residence. As long as you intend to return, you’re still a resident.
But leave the country for a full calendar month? That makes you ineligible for that month for some programs.
Common Mistakes People Make
Let me share what trips people up most.
Assuming Intent Alone Is Enough
Saying you’re a Minnesota resident doesn’t make you one.
The state looks at your actions, not your words. Keep your Minnesota home, driver’s license, and voter registration while claiming you moved? The state won’t buy it.
Document everything when you move. Change all your official documents. Update all your registrations. Make it clear through your actions.
Not Tracking Days Accurately
Think you spent less than 183 days in Minnesota? Prove it.
The burden is on you to show where you were. Use apps, calendars, receipts, anything that proves your location.
One audit found people who thought they spent five months in Florida actually spent eight months in Minnesota. They just didn’t track it carefully.
Ignoring Spousal Residency
Married couples are generally presumed to live in the same state.
Your spouse stays in Minnesota while you claim Florida residency? Minnesota will probably consider you both Minnesota residents.
There are exceptions. Separation, pending divorce, or temporary work assignments can justify different residencies. But the default assumption is you share a residence.
Missing the Big Picture
Residency isn’t about one factor.
You can’t just get a Florida driver’s license and call it good. Minnesota looks at your whole life. Where you spend time, where your family is, where your social connections are.
Make a genuine move if you want to change residency. Half measures usually fail.
How to Establish or Change Residency
So what should you actually do?
If You’re Moving to Minnesota
First, get here and stay put for the required time. Twenty days for voting. One year for tuition. As much time as needed to establish domicile for taxes.
Change your legal documents. Driver’s license first. Then voter registration. Update your car registration. Get a Minnesota ID.
Open local bank accounts. Find local doctors and dentists. Join local organizations or churches if that’s your thing.
File your taxes showing Minnesota as your residence. Register to vote here. Make it clear through your actions that Minnesota is home.
If You’re Leaving Minnesota
You need to do the opposite. And do it thoroughly.
Move your belongings out of Minnesota. Sell your Minnesota home or end your lease. If you keep a Minnesota property, rent it out to show you’re not using it yourself.
Get a driver’s license in your new state immediately. Register to vote there. Register your vehicles there. Update your address with everyone: banks, doctors, insurance, everyone.
File a final Minnesota resident tax return. Then file as a nonresident or as a resident of your new state.
Join organizations in your new location. Establish doctors, dentists, other service providers there. Show you’ve built a life in the new place.
Keep detailed records of when you moved and what you changed. You might need to prove this later.
Creating a Paper Trail
This is honestly super important.
Save everything that shows your location and intent. Moving receipts. Utility start-of-service statements. New lease agreements. Everything.
Keep a detailed calendar showing where you were each day. Apps can help with this. GPS data from your phone can prove location.
Save receipts from your new location. Credit card statements showing purchases there. Anything that shows you actually live where you claim to live.
Penalties for Getting It Wrong
Not to scare you, but this matters.
Tax Penalties
Claim the wrong residency status? The Minnesota Department of Revenue will come after you.
You’ll owe back taxes on unreported income. Plus penalties. Plus interest. It adds up fast.
The state actively audits residency claims. They’re looking for people who claim they moved but really didn’t.
Tuition Consequences
Claim resident tuition when you’re not a resident? That’s fraud.
You could have to repay the difference between resident and nonresident tuition. That’s thousands of dollars per year.
The college can also discipline you. Suspension isn’t unheard of. Your degree could even be at risk in extreme cases.
Voting Violations
Voting when you’re not eligible is a crime in Minnesota.
It’s rare for people to face charges for honest mistakes. But intentional voter fraud is a felony.
Don’t vote in two states in the same election. That’s definitely illegal. Pick one state and vote there.
Special Situations
Some situations are more complicated than others.
Military Members
Active duty military members have special rules.
You keep your home state residency even if stationed in Minnesota. You don’t become a Minnesota resident just because the military sent you here.
Military spouses also keep their home state residency. They can vote by absentee ballot in their home state.
For tuition purposes, military members and their families get resident rates automatically. Pretty nice benefit.
College Students
Students attending school in Minnesota don’t automatically become residents.
You keep your home state residency unless you take steps to change it. Just attending college isn’t enough.
But you can establish Minnesota residency. Work full-time for a year while taking few or no classes. Get a Minnesota driver’s license. Register to vote here. Make Minnesota your actual home.
Snowbirds
Spend winters in Arizona and summers in Minnesota?
You can only have one domicile. Minnesota looks at where you spend more time and where your stronger connections are.
If you maintain a home in both places, keep very careful records. Track every day in each location. Be ready to prove where you actually live.
Many snowbirds end up being Minnesota residents for tax purposes. The state is aggressive about this.
Retirees
Retired and thinking of moving to a no-tax state?
Do it right from the start. Make a clean break with Minnesota.
Sell your Minnesota home or clearly establish it’s no longer your primary residence. Move all your belongings. Don’t keep coming back for months at a time.
Some retirees think they can claim Florida residency while spending summers in their Minnesota cabin. Usually doesn’t work. Minnesota will still claim you as a resident.
Resources and Help
Need more information? Here’s where to look.
Tax Residency Questions
Contact the Minnesota Department of Revenue at 651-296-3781. Their website has detailed fact sheets about residency.
Consider hiring a tax professional if you’re changing residency. The rules are complex. Getting expert help can save you money and hassle.
Tuition Residency Questions
Contact the residency office at your college. Every Minnesota college has one.
The University of Minnesota’s Residency Officer can be reached at 612-626-4432. They handle residency determinations and appeals.
Minnesota State colleges have their own residency officers. Contact your specific campus for help.
Voting Questions
The Minnesota Secretary of State’s office handles voting questions. Call them at 651-215-1440.
Your county auditor can also help with voter registration questions. Every Minnesota county has an elections office.
Check your voter registration status online at mnvotes.sos.mn.gov. You can also register online there.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I be a resident of two states at once?
No. You can only have one domicile at a time. But different states might try to claim you as a resident, which creates dual residency problems. You need to clearly establish residence in one state to avoid this.
How long do I need to live in Minnesota before I’m a resident?
It depends on the purpose. Twenty days for voting. One year for college tuition. For taxes, it’s about domicile and the 183-day rule, which can happen in a single year. There’s no single answer that fits all situations.
I’m moving to Minnesota for college. Am I a resident?
Not automatically. If you’re moving primarily to attend college, you won’t qualify for resident tuition rates initially. You’d need to establish domicile by living here for a year while working, not just attending school.
Can I keep my other state’s driver’s license if I move to Minnesota?
Technically no. Minnesota law requires new residents to get a Minnesota driver’s license within 60 days of moving here. Keeping your old license while living in Minnesota could hurt your residency claims.
What happens if I’m audited for tax residency?
The state will ask for detailed proof of where you lived. They want calendars, receipts, credit card statements, anything showing your location. If you can’t prove you were outside Minnesota for more than half the year, you’ll likely be deemed a Minnesota resident.
Final Thoughts
Minnesota residency laws are more complex than most people realize.
The key is understanding which type of residency matters for your situation. Tax residency? Follow the domicile factors and track your days carefully. Tuition residency? Plan ahead and establish real connections to Minnesota. Voting? Just live here for 20 days.
Most importantly, be consistent. Your actions should match your claims. Don’t say you live in Florida if your whole life is still in Minnesota.
Keep good records. Track your time. Document your moves. Update all your official paperwork.
When in doubt, get professional help. Tax professionals, college advisors, and election officials can all provide guidance for your specific situation.
Now you know the basics. Stay informed, keep good records, and when things get complicated, don’t hesitate to ask for help.
References
- Minnesota Department of Revenue – Income Tax Fact Sheet 1: Residency https://www.revenue.state.mn.us/income-tax-fact-sheet-1-residency
- Minnesota Statute 135A.043 – Resident Tuition Eligibility https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/cite/135A.043
- Minnesota Secretary of State – Who Can Vote https://www.sos.mn.gov/elections-voting/register-to-vote/who-can-vote/
- Minnesota Rules 8001.0300 – Resident and Domicile Defined https://www.revisor.mn.gov/rules/8001.0300/
- Minnesota Department of Human Services – State Residence Requirements https://www.dhs.state.mn.us/main/idcplg?IdcService=GET_DYNAMIC_CONVERSION&dDocName=CM_001106
