City business license guide
Last updated: April 30, 2026
Starting a Minneapolis business can mean several checks. The city uses the term business license, but the exact license depends on what you do. A restaurant, food truck, short-term rental host, tattoo shop, taxi business, contractor, or tobacco seller may have different steps from a home-based consultant.
This guide explains city, county, state, and federal layers before you sign a lease, open, sell online, hire workers, or apply for a city license.
Bottom line
Minneapolis has a city business licensing system handled by Business Licenses & Consumer Services. The city says business owners should apply for the right license, follow the checklist, and start early because inspections and approvals may be needed. You may also need zoning review, occupancy approval, construction permits, health inspections, fire permits, sign permits, county licenses, Minnesota tax registrations, state licenses, and federal tax steps.
Do not treat an LLC, assumed name, sales tax account, EIN, or marketplace account as a city business license. Those are separate layers.
Quick start for Minneapolis business owners
- Describe what you sell, where you work, whether customers visit, and whether you handle food, alcohol, tobacco, lodging, vehicles, animals, body art, massage, entertainment, waste, or construction.
- Check the city license type on the Minneapolis business licenses page.
- Before you sign a lease, check Planning and Zoning and the zoning map for the address.
- Ask whether the space needs occupancy approval, building permits, health review, fire inspection, or a sign permit.
- Register with the Minnesota Secretary of State and Minnesota Department of Revenue if your business type, tax activity, or name choice requires it.
- Get an EIN from the IRS if your business needs one, especially if you form an entity, hire employees, or operate as a partnership or corporation.
Minneapolis business license facts box
| City | Minneapolis, Minnesota |
|---|---|
| Main city term | Business license |
| Main city office | Business Licenses & Consumer Services |
| City license office phone | 612-673-2080, as listed by the city |
| City license office address | Public Service Building, 505 Fourth Ave. S., Room 220, Minneapolis, MN 55415 |
| Planning and zoning office | Community Planning & Economic Development, often called CPED |
| County | Hennepin County |
| Best first check | Your business activity and your exact address |
The city license page is organized by business type. That is important. A cleaner, a restaurant, a short-term rental host, a sign contractor, a food truck, and an online seller may not follow the same path.
City, county, state, and federal layers
Business licensing is layered. One registration does not usually cover every layer.
| Layer | What it may cover | Where to check |
|---|---|---|
| City of Minneapolis | Business licenses, local inspections, food licenses, short-term rentals, sign permits, construction permits, fire permits, zoning, and occupancy questions. | Start with city Business Licenses & Consumer Services, Planning and Zoning, and Development Review. |
| Hennepin County | Some county licenses, family child care, hazardous waste generator licensing, and county programs. Hennepin regulates food, pools, and lodging in some county cities, but Minneapolis handles several of these areas itself. | Use the Hennepin County business licenses page when your activity appears there. |
| State of Minnesota | Entity filings, assumed names, Minnesota tax ID, sales tax, withholding, unemployment insurance, paid leave employer accounts, and state professional or industry licenses. | Check the Secretary of State, Department of Revenue, DEED, UI/Paid Leave, and Minnesota ELicensing. |
| Federal | EIN, federal tax accounts, and federal licenses for regulated activities such as alcohol production, aviation, firearms, broadcasting, transportation, or some agriculture. | Check the IRS, SBA, and the federal agency that regulates your activity. |
| Private platforms | Marketplace, delivery app, payment processor, Airbnb, Vrbo, Etsy, Amazon, or Shopify rules. | Check the platform rules, but remember they do not replace city or state requirements. |
Minneapolis city business licenses
Minneapolis calls its local requirement a business license. The official city application page says applicants fill out an application, follow the checklist, and start early. You may submit by email, U.S. mail, or in person, and a license inspector will review the application.
The city does not have one simple form for every business. License areas include food and restaurants, alcohol and tobacco, animal-related businesses, contractors, door-to-door and secondhand sales, dry cleaning and laundry, entertainment and recreation, lodging, vehicles, and other special categories. Use the city’s current license category page.
For a broader primer on how licenses differ from entity filings and tax accounts, see BusinessLicenseGuide.com’s business license vs LLC vs DBA vs seller’s permit guide.
What the city may ask for
The city’s business forms page lists items such as background reports, insurance certificate requirements, floor plan samples, safety plans, sound plans, source of funds information, and surveillance camera rules. Not every business needs every item. Read the checklist for your license type.
Fees and renewals
Minneapolis posts a license fee schedule. The city says the schedule lists fees for more than 600 types of licenses and license-related items. Because fees depend on the license type, this guide does not repeat dollar amounts. Check the city fee schedule and your application packet before you budget or pay.
Do not guess your fee. A restaurant, tobacco dealer, taxi-related business, rental license, sign contractor, or food truck may have a different fee and review path. If the city page does not clearly show the current fee for your exact license type, ask Business Licenses & Consumer Services before submitting payment.
Zoning, home businesses, inspections, and occupancy
Check zoning before you commit to a location. Minneapolis Planning and Zoning provides maps, handouts, and code links. The city’s zoning map can help you identify the primary zoning district, built form overlay district, and any additional overlay district. These layers can affect whether your use is allowed.
Home businesses need special care. The city has a home occupation rules page. It says the rules are meant to protect the character and livability of the neighborhood. If you want a plain-English overview of this topic, see our home occupation permit guide.
If you are opening in a storefront, office, warehouse, kitchen, salon, studio, lodging space, or other commercial property, ask about a Certificate of Occupancy. Minneapolis says a Certificate of Occupancy is required before a new building can be occupied and when there is a change in building use or occupancy classification. It is valid for the life of the building or until the use or occupancy changes.
Construction work is a separate layer. The city’s construction permits section explains building permits, plan submittal, inspections, and related reviews. Minneapolis Development Review helps applicants identify permit applications, upload plans, and process payments.
Common city inspections
Minneapolis says inspections can depend on property type, whether you are opening new or taking over, whether you are renovating, and whether you serve food or alcohol. The city’s open a business page describes business licensing, occupancy, environmental health, and fire inspections.
| Situation | Minneapolis item to check | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Restaurant, coffee shop, caterer, grocery, food cart, or food truck | Food and restaurants | Food businesses often need a city license, plan review, food safety steps, and inspection before opening. |
| New storefront, change of use, build-out, or major remodel | Construction permits and Certificate of Occupancy | The space may need plan review, final inspections, and occupancy approval before customers enter. |
| New wall sign, awning sign, or building sign | Sign permit | Minneapolis says a sign permit is required to legally hang signs on buildings, and permits go through licensed sign contractors. |
| Hazardous materials, fire systems, commercial hood, or certain event uses | Fire permits and registrations | Fire review may apply to life safety systems, operational permits, kitchen exhaust, or hazardous materials. |
| Airbnb, Vrbo, or similar rental hosting | Short-term rental hosting license | The city says short-term rental hosts need a license and must list the registration identification number on platforms. |
Hennepin County requirements
Do not assume every Minneapolis business has a county license. Also do not assume the county never matters. The city’s own “what Minneapolis does not license” page says Hennepin County and the State of Minnesota issue some business licenses, and it lists family day care under Hennepin County.
Hennepin County has a business license section for items such as body art, cannabis, family child care, food, pools and lodging, gambling permits, hazardous waste, liquor, precious metal dealers, retail tobacco, solid waste haulers, swimming pools, and transient merchants. Some of these are not issued by the county inside Minneapolis if the city handles that license type. For example, the county tobacco page says a business already licensed by a city does not need the county tobacco license.
One county item many businesses miss is hazardous waste. Hennepin County says all businesses in the county that produce hazardous waste must be licensed. This can matter for auto repair, printing, labs, dry cleaning, manufacturing, some salons, and other businesses that generate regulated waste.
Minnesota state registrations and licenses
Minnesota state steps depend on your structure, name, taxes, employees, and industry. The Minnesota Secretary of State says almost all businesses in Minnesota must register with its office. Before registering, choose a structure such as sole proprietorship, LLC, corporation, or partnership. For a state overview, see our Minnesota business license guide.
If you use a business name that is not your legal name, check the Minnesota Secretary of State’s Assumed Name/DBA page. Minnesota says that after filing an assumed name, you must publish the certificate or amendment in a qualified legal newspaper for two consecutive issues in the county where the principal place of business is located.
If you make taxable sales in Minnesota, the Department of Revenue says you must register for a Minnesota Tax ID Number and Sales and Use Tax account before making taxable sales. Sales tax applies to most retail sales of goods and some services. If you hire employees, check withholding, unemployment insurance, and Paid Leave employer account rules.
Some trades and professions are licensed by state boards or agencies, not the city. Minnesota DEED points business owners to Minnesota ELicensing, a state license portal with license, permit, registration, and certification information from many state agencies.
Federal steps
Many small businesses need an EIN from the IRS. The IRS says businesses generally need one to hire employees, operate as a partnership or corporation, pay sales or excise taxes, change structure or ownership, or administer certain trusts and plans. If you form an LLC, partnership, corporation, or tax-exempt organization, form the entity through the state before applying for an EIN.
Some business activities need a federal license or permit. The U.S. Small Business Administration says federally regulated activities need a federal license or permit from the right federal agency. This can apply to certain alcohol, aviation, firearms, broadcasting, transportation, or agriculture activities.
Beneficial ownership reporting has changed. FinCEN says entities created in the United States and their beneficial owners are now exempt from BOI reporting under the current interim final rule, while certain foreign entities may still have duties. Check FinCEN’s BOI page before relying on old reminders.
Costs you can plan for
This guide does not list dollar amounts unless they are confirmed for your exact license. Minneapolis and Minnesota fees can change, and the right fee depends on your license type, location, floor plan, size, risk level, and activity.
| Possible cost | Who may charge it | How to confirm |
|---|---|---|
| City business license fee | City of Minneapolis | Use the Minneapolis license fee schedule for your exact license type. |
| Plan review fee | City, county, or state agency | Ask before remodeling, changing a menu, building out a space, or changing ownership. |
| Construction permit or trade permit fee | City of Minneapolis | Confirm with Minneapolis Development Review before work starts. |
| Certificate of Occupancy or inspection-related costs | City of Minneapolis | Ask whether your space needs final inspection or occupancy approval. |
| State filing, assumed name, or tax account costs | Minnesota Secretary of State or Department of Revenue | Use official state filing and tax registration pages. |
| Insurance, bond, or contractor costs | Private insurer, surety, landlord, or licensed contractor | Read the city checklist and ask the agency which proof is required. |
What does this mean for me?
For a simple service business with no customer visits, no employees, and no regulated activity, the main work may be confirming whether Minneapolis requires a city license for your activity, checking home occupation rules, registering your business name with the state if needed, and setting up tax accounts if needed.
For a public-facing business, the work is bigger. You should check zoning before signing a lease, confirm the city license type, ask whether inspections are required, check the Certificate of Occupancy, and confirm whether your sign, remodel, food service, fire safety setup, or health plan needs approval.
For mobile businesses, the key question is where the business is based and where it operates. Minneapolis says mobile and home-based businesses are possible property types, but regulatory requirements and business type matter. Food trucks have their own permit stack; for more detail, see our food truck license guide.
Real-world examples
Example 1: Home-based web designer
A web designer working from home should check home occupation rules, state business registration, assumed name rules if using a trade name, and Minnesota tax rules if selling taxable items or services. If no customers come to the home, the city review may be simpler, but the owner should still ask whether a local license applies.
Example 2: Coffee shop taking over an old restaurant space
The owner should not rely on the old tenant’s approvals. They should check zoning, the city food license category, plan review, grease and sewer rules, inspections, occupancy approval, sign permit, fire inspection, Minnesota tax ID, sales tax, and employer accounts.
Example 3: Short-term rental host
A host using Airbnb or Vrbo should check the city short-term rental hosting license and platform display rules. The platform account is not the license. Also check rental rules, taxes, insurance, and any private lease, condo, or association limits.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Signing a lease before checking zoning and occupancy rules.
- Calling an LLC a business license.
- Using an old PDF instead of the current city application page.
- Assuming Hennepin County issues every food, pool, lodging, or tobacco license inside Minneapolis.
- Opening to the public before required inspections are complete.
- Putting up a sign before checking the sign permit rules.
- Forgetting Minnesota sales tax, withholding, unemployment insurance, or Paid Leave employer accounts.
- Relying on private platform approval instead of city or state approval.
Phone and email scripts
Use these scripts when you contact an agency. Replace the bracketed words.
City business license script
Hello, I am planning to operate a [business type] at [address or general location] in Minneapolis. Customers will [visit / not visit], and I will [sell food / sell products / provide services / operate online / operate mobile]. Which Minneapolis business license category should I apply under, and what checklist should I follow?
Zoning and lease script
Hello, before I sign a lease for [address], I need to confirm whether [business activity] is allowed at this location. Can you tell me which zoning district and overlay rules apply, and whether I need land use approval, home occupation review, or another zoning step?
Inspection and occupancy script
Hello, I am opening a [business type] in an existing space at [address]. I may [renovate / change the layout / add equipment / serve food / install a sign]. Do I need building permits, final inspections, a Certificate of Occupancy inspection, health inspection, or fire inspection before opening?
State tax and employer script
Hello, I am starting a Minneapolis business that will [sell taxable products or services / hire employees / use a trade name]. Which Minnesota tax accounts, sales tax registration, withholding account, unemployment insurance account, or Paid Leave employer account should I set up before I start?
Keep notes from each call or email, including the date, agency, person you contacted, and the exact next step they gave you.
What to do if this does not work
If you cannot find the right license type, do not guess. Contact Business Licenses & Consumer Services and describe your activity in plain words. If the answer depends on the address, contact Planning and Zoning with the address before you spend money on rent, equipment, or signs.
If one agency sends you to another, ask for the office name, permit or license name, and official page or form. If answers conflict, ask for the current rule or checklist. For bigger money decisions, talk with a qualified lawyer, CPA, insurance agent, architect, contractor, or licensing professional.
A compact compliance checklist
- Write down your exact business activity.
- Choose your location type: home, mobile, coworking, commercial, or online-only.
- Check the Minneapolis business license category.
- Check zoning before signing a lease.
- Ask whether a Certificate of Occupancy is needed.
- Ask whether construction, sign, fire, health, or environmental permits apply.
- Check Hennepin County business licenses if your activity appears on the county list.
- Register your business with the Minnesota Secretary of State if required.
- File an assumed name if you use a DBA, and follow the publication step if it applies.
- Register for Minnesota tax accounts before taxable sales or payroll.
- Register for Minnesota UI and Paid Leave employer accounts if you have covered employees.
- Apply for an EIN from the IRS if your business needs one.
- Check federal agency permits if your industry is federally regulated.
- Save copies of approvals, licenses, inspection sign-offs, account numbers, and renewal notices.
Official resources
- Minneapolis business licenses
- How to apply for a Minneapolis business license
- Minneapolis license fees
- What Minneapolis does not license
- Minneapolis property types
- Hennepin County business licenses
- Hennepin County hazardous waste licensing
- Minnesota Secretary of State business registration
- Minnesota tax registration
- Minnesota UI and Paid Leave employer accounts
- IRS EIN page
About BusinessLicenseGuide.com
BusinessLicenseGuide.com is a plain-English licensing resource for owners. We are not a government agency, law firm, CPA firm, filing service, or permit expeditor. We read official sources and explain the practical steps to check, but the official agency controls the rule, form, fee, and deadline.
FAQ
Does Minneapolis require a business license?
Minneapolis uses the term business license, and the city says business owners should apply for the right license and follow the checklist for that license type. The exact requirement depends on your activity, location, and whether inspections or other approvals are needed.
Is an LLC the same as a Minneapolis business license?
No. An LLC is a legal entity filing with the state. A Minneapolis business license is a city permission for certain local business activities. You may need both, one, or other registrations depending on your facts.
Who handles Minneapolis business licenses?
Business Licenses & Consumer Services handles Minneapolis business license applications. Planning and Zoning, Development Review, Environmental Health, Fire, and other city offices may also review your business depending on the location and activity.
Do I need zoning approval before opening in Minneapolis?
You should check zoning before opening, moving, or signing a lease. Minneapolis zoning rules depend on the property’s primary zoning district, built form overlay district, and any additional overlay districts.
Does Hennepin County license Minneapolis restaurants?
Not usually for businesses located in Minneapolis. Hennepin County says some cities, including Minneapolis, have their own food, pool, and lodging departments. A Minneapolis food business should start with the city food and restaurants license page and confirm any county layer only if directed.
Do online businesses in Minneapolis need a city license?
It depends on what the online business does, where it is based, whether customers visit, whether goods are stored or shipped from Minneapolis, and whether the activity is regulated. Check Minneapolis business licensing and home occupation rules before assuming no city step applies.
Disclaimer
This article is informational only. It is not legal, tax, financial, insurance, employment, safety, zoning, licensing, or professional advice. Rules, fees, forms, links, and policies can change. Confirm important details with the official agency or a qualified professional. BusinessLicenseGuide.com does not guarantee approval, eligibility, compliance, savings, income, speed, or results.
Updates
Last updated: April 30, 2026
Next review: August 30, 2026
Reviewed for Minneapolis city licensing, zoning, inspections, Hennepin County layers, Minnesota registration and tax steps, and federal EIN and license considerations.
