Minnesota Self-Defense Laws: Duty to Retreat & Castle Doctrine (2026)

Minnesota Self-Defense Laws: Duty to Retreat & Castle Doctrine (2026)
Minnesota is NOT a stand-your-ground state. Outside the home, a person has a legal duty to make a reasonable effort to retreat before using deadly force, a rule established by the Minnesota Supreme Court in State v. Glowacki, 630 N.W.2d 392 (Minn. 2001). Inside one's own home, no duty to retreat applies. The principal deadly-force statute is Minn. Stat. 609.065, which limits the justifiable taking of life to two circumstances: preventing an offense the actor reasonably believes will cause great bodily harm or death, or preventing a felony in the actor's place of abode.
Information last verified on June 1, 2026.
Important: This article provides general legal information about Minnesota law. It is not legal advice. Use-of-force situations carry serious criminal and civil stakes that turn on specific facts. Laws can change. Consult a licensed Minnesota criminal-defense attorney before making any decisions based on information here.
Does Minnesota Have a Duty to Retreat?
Yes. Minnesota imposes a legal duty to make a reasonable effort to retreat before using deadly force in public. This rule is not written into a statute; it comes from Minnesota Supreme Court decisions interpreting Minn. Stat. 609.065 and the common law of self-defense.
The leading case is State v. Glowacki, 630 N.W.2d 392 (Minn. 2001). In Glowacki, the Minnesota Supreme Court confirmed that a person in a public space must attempt to retreat when retreat can be done safely, before deadly force is justified. The court framed the obligation as a reasonable-effort standard: the defender does not need to flee into danger, but must take reasonable steps to avoid the confrontation if possible.
The duty to retreat applies in streets, parking lots, parks, businesses open to the public, and any other location that is not the person's own home. Minnesota is one of roughly a dozen states that still maintain this obligation, placing it in contrast with the majority of states that have enacted stand-your-ground laws removing any retreat requirement.
The Reasonable-Effort Standard
Minnesota courts do not require a defender to retreat at any cost. The standard is reasonableness: if retreating safely is genuinely possible, the defender must attempt it. If retreat would increase the danger, is physically impossible, or would require abandoning a lawful right the person is obligated to exercise, the obligation may not apply. Minnesota courts evaluate the specific facts of each encounter.
This means the duty to retreat in Minnesota is fact-intensive. A defendant who claims self-defense in a public-space killing will typically face jury instructions asking whether a reasonable person in the same situation would have tried to retreat. Failure to retreat, when retreat was reasonably available, can defeat an otherwise valid self-defense claim.
Minnesota Compared to Stand-Your-Ground States
In stand-your-ground states such as Florida, Texas, or Arizona, a person who is lawfully present in any location has no legal duty to retreat before using deadly force in self-defense. Minnesota has never enacted such a law. Proposals to remove the public duty to retreat have appeared in the Minnesota Legislature, but none has become law. A bill introduced in the 2025 legislative session to expand self-defense rights and remove the duty to retreat outside the home was not enacted as of June 1, 2026.
The Castle Doctrine in Minnesota
Minnesota recognizes the castle doctrine: a person inside their own home has no duty to retreat before using deadly force in self-defense. This exception to the general retreat rule is established by case law, not by a specific castle-doctrine statute.

In State v. Glowacki, the Minnesota Supreme Court explicitly adopted the castle doctrine, holding that a person who is attacked in their own home is not required to retreat before using force to defend themselves. The court reasoned that the home is a place of sanctuary and that requiring a person to flee from their own dwelling would be an unreasonable imposition.
A related principle appears in State v. Carothers, which confirmed the home exception and reinforced that the occupant of a dwelling who is threatened inside it may stand their ground. These decisions together form the foundation of Minnesota's home-exception rule.
Scope of the Castle Doctrine: Home Only
Minnesota's castle doctrine is narrow compared to many states. It applies only to the person's place of abode, meaning the dwelling where the person lives. Minnesota courts have not extended the no-retreat protection to:
- Vehicles
- Workplaces
- Hotels or temporary lodgings
- Curtilage (the yard or area immediately surrounding the home)
- A friend's home or another person's residence
The restriction to the home alone is significant. If a confrontation begins outside the front door and the defender retreats inside, courts may treat the location where the force is used, not where the threat originated, as the relevant consideration. Minnesota case law on this boundary has not always been consistent, and defendants in close-proximity-to-home situations should not assume castle-doctrine protection extends to the front porch, driveway, or exterior of the property.
No Statutory Presumption
Many states with castle-doctrine statutes include a presumption of reasonable fear: when an intruder forcibly enters a home, the occupant is presumed to have held a reasonable belief that deadly force was necessary. Minnesota has no such presumption. An occupant who uses deadly force against a home intruder must still demonstrate, on the facts of that specific encounter, that they reasonably believed the force was necessary to prevent great bodily harm or death or to prevent a felony in the abode. The absence of a presumption shifts more of the factual burden onto the defender.
When Deadly Force Is Justified Under Minn. Stat. 609.065
Minnesota Statute 609.065 sets the standard for when the intentional taking of a life is legally justified. The statute is brief and contains a single provision. The intentional taking of another's life is not authorized by Minn. Stat. 609.06 except when necessary:
- In resisting or preventing an offense that the actor reasonably believes exposes the actor or another person to great bodily harm or death.
- In preventing the commission of a felony in the actor's place of abode.
Those are the only two circumstances under which intentional deadly force is legally justified in Minnesota. Outside these limits, even a genuine and reasonable fear of harm will not justify a killing.
The Great-Bodily-Harm-or-Death Standard
The first prong covers defensive situations in which the person faces a threat of great bodily harm or death. Great bodily harm under Minnesota law means bodily injury that creates a high probability of death, causes serious permanent disfigurement, or causes a permanent or protracted loss or impairment of the function of a body part or organ.
A threat that might cause minor injury, pain, or temporary harm does not meet this threshold. Minnesota courts have held that the actor's belief must be reasonable, not merely genuine. A person who honestly but unreasonably believes they face a deadly threat is not protected under 609.065.
Defending Against a Felony in the Home
The second prong of 609.065 permits deadly force to prevent the commission of a felony inside the actor's place of abode. This provision mirrors the castle-doctrine principle and covers scenarios such as a home invasion where the intruder's entry or intended conduct constitutes a felony.
Not every felony triggers this protection. Minnesota courts have interpreted the provision to require that the felony itself create a risk of death or serious harm, or that a reasonable person would view the felony as posing that risk under the circumstances. A non-violent felony taking place in the home, standing alone, may not justify the use of deadly force depending on the facts.
Non-Deadly Force Under Minn. Stat. 609.06
The authority for non-deadly force comes from Minn. Stat. 609.06, which permits reasonable force in a wider set of circumstances, including resisting an offense against the person, defending property from trespass or unlawful interference, effecting a lawful arrest, and protecting against those who pose a danger to themselves or others. Non-deadly force under 609.06 does not carry the same high threshold as 609.065 and is not subject to the same duty-to-retreat analysis, though proportionality is always required.
Defense of Property in Minnesota
Minnesota Statute 609.06, subdivision 1, permits the use of reasonable force to resist trespass or unlawful interference with property. However, the right to defend property has strict limits under Minnesota law:

- Deadly force may not be used solely to protect property. Property alone, no matter its value, does not justify the intentional taking of a life under 609.065.
- Non-deadly force may be used to prevent a trespasser from entering or to remove them, but only if the force is reasonable and proportionate to the interference.
- If a property defense situation also creates a genuine threat of great bodily harm or death to the person, the first prong of 609.065 can apply. In that case, the justification rests on personal safety, not the property interest.
A person who shoots and kills someone solely to prevent theft or trespass, without a genuine personal safety threat, will not be protected by 609.065. This rule applies equally inside and outside the home.
Pending Reform: 2025 Self-Defense Legislation
Minnesota lawmakers introduced legislation in the 2025 legislative session that would have expanded self-defense rights in the state. The proposal included eliminating the public duty to retreat and extending greater legal protection to people who use force in self-defense outside the home. The bill reflected a nationwide trend in which states have moved toward stand-your-ground frameworks.
As of June 1, 2026, no such bill had been enacted into Minnesota law. The public duty to retreat in spaces outside the home remains in effect under current case law. The castle doctrine continues to apply only inside the home, and Minnesota has no statutory presumption of reasonable fear and no civil immunity statute for self-defense.
If legislation is passed in future sessions, the rules described in this article would change. Anyone relying on this information should verify the current state of the law.
When Self-Defense Fails in Minnesota
Several circumstances can defeat a self-defense claim even when the basic facts might otherwise support one.

Initial aggressor. A person who starts or provokes a confrontation generally cannot claim self-defense. Minnesota courts evaluate who first created the reasonable apprehension of harm. An initial aggressor can potentially restore the right to self-defense by clearly withdrawing from the fight and communicating that withdrawal, but simply stepping back is not always sufficient.
Failure to retreat in a public space. If a person was outside their home, knew that safe retreat was reasonably available, and chose not to retreat before using deadly force, the duty-to-retreat requirement can defeat the self-defense claim regardless of the underlying threat.
Excessive force. Using deadly force in response to a threat that does not rise to the level of great bodily harm or death, or using more force than was necessary to stop the threat, removes the justification. The force used must be proportionate to the threat faced.
Unreasonable belief. If the defendant's belief that deadly force was necessary was genuinely held but objectively unreasonable, Minnesota law does not protect the use of that force. Courts apply an objective reasonable-person standard to the actor's belief about the necessity of deadly force.
Combat by agreement. Participants in a mutually agreed-upon fight cannot claim self-defense unless one party escalates far beyond the agreed terms. If a person consented to a fistfight and then uses a weapon, or if the opponent pulls a weapon first, the self-defense calculus may shift, but mutual combatants start from a disadvantaged position in claiming justification.
For a comparison of Minnesota laws and squatters rights, where defense of property and dwelling concepts intersect, see Minnesota squatters rights.
For a nationwide comparison of stand-your-ground and duty-to-retreat states, see self-defense laws by state.
More Minnesota Laws
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- Minnesota Car Seat Laws
- Minnesota Child Support Laws
- Minnesota Data Privacy Laws
- Minnesota Dog Bite Laws
- Minnesota Emancipation Laws
- Minnesota Expungement Laws
- Minnesota Hit and Run Laws
- Minnesota Lemon Laws
- Minnesota Power of Attorney Laws
- Minnesota Recording Laws
- Minnesota Sexting Laws
- Minnesota Squatters Rights Laws
- Minnesota Statute of Limitations
- Minnesota Whistleblower Laws
Sources
For laws in other states, see self-defense laws by state.
For related Minnesota property law, see Minnesota squatters rights.
Last updated: June 1, 2026.
Sources and References
- Minn. Stat. 609.065: Justifiable Taking of Life, Minnesota Office of the Revisor of Statutes(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- Minn. Stat. 609.06: Authorized Use of Force, Minnesota Office of the Revisor of Statutes(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- State v. Glowacki, 630 N.W.2d 392 (Minn. 2001) - duty to retreat and home exception(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- Cornell LII: Self-defense overview(law.cornell.edu)
- Cornell LII: Castle doctrine overview(law.cornell.edu)