Quick read

Strong livability indicators, but not a one-size-fits-all move.

Minneapolis has strong education levels, solid incomes, major parks, strong bike access, a large airport, and a real urban identity. It is still a city where winter matters, neighborhood choice matters, and the best move may be Minneapolis proper or a nearby suburb.

PopulationAbout 429,000
Median incomeAbout $81,000
Home valueAbout $360,000
Gross rentAbout $1,370

Demographics and household profile

Basic population, density, and household context.

Data pointValueWhy it matters
Population estimateAbout 429,000Large enough to feel like a real city, much smaller than major coastal metros.
Population densityAbout 8,000 people per sq. mileDense enough for city living without mega-city intensity.
Persons per householdAbout 2.1Signals many singles, couples, roommates, and smaller households.
Foreign-born populationAbout 14%Shows meaningful immigrant presence.

Source type: U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts / ACS estimates. Round figures before making a current decision.

Housing and rent data

Core numbers for buyers, renters, and city-vs-suburb comparisons.

Housing metricValueWhat it suggests
Median owner-occupied home valueAbout $360,000Minneapolis is not bargain-priced just because it is in the Midwest.
Median gross rentAbout $1,370Useful Census baseline for rent burden.
Average market rentOften higher than Census gross rentCurrent listings may feel more expensive than long-running data suggests.
Owner-occupied housing rateUnder halfReinforces Minneapolis as more renter-heavy than many suburbs.

Source types: U.S. Census Bureau, Redfin housing market pages, Zillow rental market trends. Market figures change frequently.

Housing takeaway

The city can be a value, but not automatically

Minneapolis looks affordable against large coastal metros, but it is not cheap once you target desirable neighborhoods, newer buildings, garage parking, or family-size housing.

Move lens

The biggest housing question is often city vs close-in suburb

If you want easier ownership, more parking, bigger lots, or simpler school planning, the broader metro may fit better than Minneapolis proper.

Income, employment, and affordability context

These numbers help answer whether the city’s cost structure matches its earning base.

Economic metricValueWhy it matters
Median household incomeAbout $81,000Solid city income base by U.S. standards.
Per capita incomeAbout $53,000Useful for understanding individual earning power.
Poverty rateMeaningful city-level poverty remainsShows that inequality matters even in a strong metro.
Labor force participationHigh compared with many placesSignals an engaged working-age population.

Source type: U.S. Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics metro labor data.

Commute, transit, walkability, and access

Minneapolis is more usable without constant driving than many peer metros, but location still matters.

Mobility metricValueWhat it tells you
Mean travel time to workAbout 22 minutesShorter than many large metros, but your real commute depends on job and neighborhood.
Walk ScoreVery walkable city averageNeighborhood variation is large.
Bike ScoreStrongOne of the city’s clearer quality-of-life advantages.
MSP AirportMajor passenger airportImportant for frequent flyers and people with distant family.

Source types: Census commute data, Walk Score city profile, Metropolitan Airports Commission / MSP Airport.

Parks and outdoor infrastructure

This is one of the strongest citywide arguments for Minneapolis.

Park metricValue / takeawayWhy movers care
Parkland and waterThousands of acresLarge enough to shape daily life, not just aesthetics.
Park propertiesExtensive citywide networkShows distributed access across the city.
Grand RoundsMajor biking and walking networkA practical amenity for active households.
LakesMultiple lakes inside the park systemWater recreation is part of the urban fabric.

Source type: Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board.

Climate and weather context

These are not trivia numbers. They shape daily life.

Climate metricTakeawayWhy movers care
Winter characterLong, cold, and routine-changingParking, walking, transit, and social habits all change.
Annual snowfallSubstantialSnow is a normal part of planning, not a rare event.
SummerWarm and activeWarm seasons are a major lifestyle payoff.

Source type: NOAA climate normals and local weather summaries.

Data points that support moving

  • High educational attainment
  • Solid city incomes
  • Short average commute time
  • Strong bikeability and decent walkability
  • Huge, actively used park system

Data points that should make you pause

  • Housing is not truly cheap in desirable areas
  • Market rents may exceed expectations
  • Owner-occupancy is under half
  • Winter climate is a real lifestyle factor
  • Citywide averages hide neighborhood differences
Sources

Data sources to use before updating this page

  • U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts and ACS tables for Minneapolis city, Minnesota
  • Redfin Minneapolis Housing Market
  • Zillow Rental Market Trends: Minneapolis
  • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics metro labor data
  • Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board
  • Metropolitan Airports Commission / MSP Airport
  • Walk Score city profile
  • City of Minneapolis crime dashboard for current neighborhood research

This page intentionally rounds many figures. Before publication updates, verify the latest numbers and dates from the original source.