← JobPapers Lien Guide: HVAC Plumbing Electrical Roofing
MN  ยท  Mechanic's Lien Guide

Minnesota Mechanic's Lien Warning Requirements for Contractors

Know your deadlines before you lose your rights. Minnesota lien law in plain English โ€” no legalese, no fluff.

Get the Contractor Pack โ€” $49 → Includes lien waiver template + 6 more contractor forms
Disclaimer: This is general information, not legal advice. Verify current deadlines with your state's contractor board or a construction attorney before relying on any figure here.

Minnesota Lien Law at a Glance

๐Ÿ“…
Lien Filing Deadline
120 days from last furnishing of labor or materials
from last day of furnishing labor or materials
โœ…
Preliminary Notice
Not Required
No preliminary notice required
โœ…
Notice to Owner
Not Required
No statutory pre-lien notice to owner required in Minnesota.
๐Ÿ‘ท
Who Can File
Contractors, subcontractors, material suppliers, laborers, architects, engineers
โœ… No Preliminary Notice Required

Good News for Minnesota Contractors

Minnesota does not require a pre-lien preliminary notice for most contractors. However, written pre-lien notice may be required by contract terms. You still must file the lien within the deadline and in the correct recording office.

Does the Property Type Change Your Deadline?

Same 120-day deadline for both. Minnesota's lien law is relatively straightforward.

What Contractors Get Wrong in Minnesota

1
Missing the 120-day filing deadline from last work or materials
2
Filing in the wrong county recorder or registrar of titles
3
Not enforcing the lien โ€” Minnesota requires enforcement within 1 year of the lien statement filing

Don't Lose Money Because of a Missing Form

The Contractor Pack includes a lien waiver template plus 6 other forms every contractor needs โ€” estimates, invoices, change orders, subcontractor agreements, and more. One-time payment, yours forever.

Get the Contractor Pack โ€” $49 →

7-day money-back guarantee  ยท  Instant download  ยท  No subscription

Minnesota Lien Law Questions

Lien Law Guides for Every State