2025 Session Last amended: 2024 session

§ 504B.321 — Complaint and Summons

Plain-Language Summary

This is the main law governing how eviction cases are filed and started in Minnesota. A landlord must file a complaint with the court and have the tenant served with a summons. For evictions based on nonpayment of rent, the landlord must first give the tenant a 14-day written notice before filing. Eviction cases are not public until the court enters a final judgment.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When a landlord begins a formal eviction case in court. Who this affects: All residential tenants and landlords. Key points: For nonpayment evictions, the landlord must first send a written 14-day notice listing the exact amount owed and information about legal help and financial assistance. The tenant gets 7 to 14 days to appear in court after the summons is issued. Expedited hearings (5-7 days) are only allowed for serious safety threats. The eviction filing is not public record until there is a final judgment.