Minnesota Gift Card Rules at a Glance
Quick-reference table. Always verify current terms with the card issuer.
| Rule | What Minnesota Law Says | Exceptions |
| Expiration of funds | Funds on a consumer gift card cannot expire under MN Stat § 325G.53 | Promotional, loyalty, and incentive cards may have expiration terms |
| Card plastic expiry | Physical card may show an expiration date on the plastic, but the balance must remain accessible through replacement or alternative redemption | — |
| Dormancy fees | No dormancy fees are permitted on covered consumer gift cards under MN Stat § 325G.53 | Promotional and business-to-business cards may differ |
| Cash-out (small balance) | Minnesota has no state cash-out requirement. Redemption for cash is at the issuer's discretion | Issuer may voluntarily offer cash-out — check card terms |
| Federal CARD Act overlay | Funds cannot expire for at least 5 years from purchase date. Inactivity fees only after 12 months of no use. Max one fee type per month. | Applies to most general-purpose prepaid and open-loop gift cards |
| Official legal source | MN Stat § 325G.53 | Minnesota Office of the Revisor of Statutes |
Expiration Rules — Details
Minnesota law is clear: the money on your gift card cannot expire. MN Stat § 325G.53 prohibits issuers from placing expiration restrictions on the underlying funds of covered consumer gift cards.
If your physical card shows an expiration date, that is the date the plastic expires — not the funds. You are entitled to a replacement card or another way to access the remaining balance (phone, website, or in-store).
What to do if an issuer refuses: document the conversation, note the date and representative name, and contact the Minnesota Attorney General or the FTC.
Service Fees — What Is Allowed
Under MN Stat § 325G.53, dormancy fees are prohibited on covered consumer gift cards. Issuers cannot erode your gift card balance through inactivity or maintenance charges.
- No dormancy fees on covered consumer gift cards
- Any fees must be clearly disclosed before purchase
- One-time activation or purchase fees are generally permitted if disclosed
The federal CARD Act also applies: inactivity fees for open-loop cards cannot start until after 12 months of no use, and only one fee type may be charged per month.
Cash-Out Right for Small Balances
Unlike California, Minnesota does not have a state law requiring issuers to redeem small remaining balances in cash. Whether you can cash out a small balance is entirely up to the issuer.
What you can do:
- Check the card's terms and conditions — some issuers voluntarily offer cash-out for small balances
- Contact the issuer directly and ask if a small-balance cash redemption is available
- If the issuer is violating its own stated terms, contact the Minnesota Attorney General
Important: Minnesota has no state cash-out threshold. Promotional and loyalty cards are typically exempt from all state protections. Always read the card terms first.
Cards That Are Exempt from These Protections
Not all cards are covered by Minnesota's consumer protections. The following card types may have different or reduced protections:
Promotional cards
Issued as part of a promotion or marketing program. These can have expiration dates and different fee structures.
Loyalty/reward cards
Points or rewards cards issued as part of a loyalty program. Funds may be subject to program terms, not state law.
Rebate cards
Cards issued as rebates for a purchase. Often treated as promotional instruments with shorter validity windows.
Practical Checklist: Before You Buy and After You Receive
Before buying
- ✓ Check the packaging for fee disclosures
- ✓ Note any activation fee (one-time, not recurring)
- ✓ Look for "no expiration" language on the card or packaging
- ✓ Verify it is a consumer gift card, not a promotional card
After receiving
- ✓ Photograph front and back of the card
- ✓ Keep the receipt and original packaging
- ✓ Check balance on the issuer's official website or phone number printed on the card
- ✓ Register the card if the issuer allows it — helps with replacement if lost
What to Do If Something Goes Wrong
1
Contact the issuer first
Use the phone number on the back of the card or the official website. Explain the issue clearly and ask for a case number.
2
Document everything
Write down dates, representative names, and what was said. Keep receipts, screenshots of balance checks, and packaging.
About this guide
This page summarizes Minnesota gift card law as of March 2026. Laws can change. Always verify current rules on the official Minnesota Revisor of Statutes site and check current issuer terms. This is educational information only — not legal advice.