2025 Session Last amended: 2021 session

§ 549.09 — Interest on Verdicts, Awards, and Judgments

Plain-Language Summary

This statute governs interest that accrues on court judgments and arbitration awards in Minnesota. For judgments of $50,000 or less, the interest rate is based on one-year U.S. Treasury bill yields (minimum 4%). For judgments over $50,000, interest accrues at 10% per year. Prejudgment interest rules encourage settlement through an offer-of-settlement mechanism.

Practical Notes
When this applies: Whenever a Minnesota court enters a money judgment or an arbitrator makes a monetary award. Who this affects: All plaintiffs and defendants in civil cases, family court litigants, and child support obligors. Key points: The interest rate for judgments of $50,000 or less and all government judgments is set annually by the state court administrator based on Treasury yields (floor of 4%). Judgments over $50,000 against private parties accrue interest at 10% per year. Prejudgment interest can be affected by settlement offers: if you reject an offer and do worse at trial, your interest may be limited. Interest does not accrue on future damages, punitive damages, or workers’ compensation benefits. As of August 1, 2022, interest no longer accrues on child support judgments. In family court, the judge may reduce or eliminate interest to avoid unfair hardship.