Minnesota does not hand idle minerals to the surface owner on a timer. A specific mechanism controls the outcome instead.
Quick answer: Minnesota does not take minerals through a simple nonuse lapse, but it uses a special statutory mechanism under Minn. Stat. 93.52, 93.55. Minnesota requires severed mineral interests to be registered and can forfeit unregistered interests through a tax forfeiture process rather than simple reversion. File the statement of severed mineral interest and pay the annual tax, or forfeit to the State (Minn. Stat. 93.52 and 93.55).
In Minnesota, an idle severed interest is handled by a defined mechanism rather than an automatic lapse under Minn. Stat. 93.52, 93.55. As of June 2026.
The risk in Minnesota is narrower than an outright lapse, but an owner who cannot be located, or who has not met a registration or recording step, can still be affected. Minnesota requires severed mineral interests to be registered and can forfeit unregistered interests through a tax forfeiture process rather than simple reversion.
Minnesota scores 45 out of 100 on the Dormancy Risk Score and ranks number 18 of 51 for how easily an absent owner can lose a severed interest.
Minnesota is unusual. Under Minn. Stat. 93.52 the owner of a severed mineral interest must file a statement of severed mineral interest and pay the annual tax. Under Minn. Stat. 93.55, failure to register, failure to refile after a conveyance, or nonpayment can cause the interest to be forfeited to the State, not to the surface owner, after notice and a hearing. The protection is to file the statement and keep the registration and tax current.
Minnesota addresses pooling, though the specifics are worth confirming in the current code.
Minnesota has no dedicated surface damages act, so a surface owner relies on the lease terms and general law for protection when minerals are developed.
Not by simple nonuse. Minnesota uses a special mechanism rather than an automatic lapse, so an idle interest is not handed to the surface owner after a fixed number of years.
There is no straightforward nonuse period in Minnesota. The interest is handled through a specific statutory mechanism instead.
Pooling exists in Minnesota; verify the present rules.
File the statement of severed mineral interest and pay the annual tax, and refile after any conveyance, or the interest can be forfeited to the State (Minn. Stat. 93.52 and 93.55).
American Mineral Registry. Mineral Rights in Minnesota. 2026. https://americanmineralregistry.com/research/states/minnesota.html
This page is a plain language reference compiled from the state code and published legal analysis. It is general information, not legal advice. Confirm against the current Minnesota code or a licensed attorney before acting.