HomeLegal DirectoryMinneapolis algorithmic rent ban (Ord. 2025-010, eff. Mar 1, 2026)

In effect Moderate protection

City of Minneapolis — Algorithmic Rent-Fixing Prohibition (Ordinance 2025-010)

Minneapolis, MN · Minneapolis Ord. 2025-010 (File 2024-01399), adding § 244.2070 to City Code, eff. March 1, 2026

Minneapolis City Council adopted Ordinance 2025-010 amending Title 12, Chapter 244 of the City Code to add Section 244.2070, prohibiting residential landlords from using algorithmic devices that employ nonpublic competitor data to recommend rental pricing or vacancy strategies. Effective March 1, 2026. A White House report estimated Twin Cities renters paid on average $324 more per unit annually due to pricing algorithms, with the national total exceeding $3.8 billion. Private right of action; license revocation possible for landlord violations.

Technical detail

Minneapolis Ord. 2025-010 adds § 244.2070 to Title 12, Chapter 244 (Housing) of the Minneapolis Code of Ordinances. Prohibits landlords from using algorithmic devices employing nonpublic competitor data (competitor lease rates, occupancy data less than 365 days old) to recommend rent pricing or vacancy strategy. Effective March 1, 2026. Enforcement: private right of action for tenants (compensatory damages + attorneys' fees); administrative enforcement with license revocation as remedy. Aligns with the wave of algorithmic rent-pricing bans in major cities responding to DOJ's antitrust case against RealPage.

Who is protected: Minneapolis residential renters subject to algorithmically coordinated rent pricing

Who must comply: Residential landlords and rent-setting algorithm vendors operating in Minneapolis

Key facts

JurisdictionMinneapolis, MN
LevelCity / local
StatusIn effect
Protection strengthModerate protection
Effective date2026-03-01
Enacted2025-12-01
CitationMinneapolis Ord. 2025-010 (File 2024-01399), adding § 244.2070 to City Code, eff. March 1, 2026
Enforced byCity of Minneapolis; private right of action for tenants
Private right of actionYes — individuals can sue
PenaltiesLicense revocation; private right of action for compensatory damages plus attorneys' fees
Topicshousing and credit decisions · automated decision-making
Last verified2026-06-26
Official sourceCity of Minneapolis — Ordinance 2025-010 (File 2024-01399), amending Title 12 Chapter 244 ↗

More AI rules in Minneapolis, MN

Related housing and credit decisions rules elsewhere

See something wrong or out of date? Submit a correction — every entry must carry a verifiable official source.