Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines: How Criminal Sentences Are Determined
Minnesota's sentencing guidelines establish a structured framework that judges use to determine criminal sentences based on offense severity and an offender's criminal history. Administered by the Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines Commission, this system applies to felony-level offenses and aims to reduce sentencing disparity across the state's 87 counties. The grid-based structure produces presumptive sentences that carry legal weight — departures require written justification — making the guidelines functionally binding in most felony proceedings under Minnesota criminal procedure.
- Definition and scope
- Core mechanics or structure
- Causal relationships or drivers
- Classification boundaries
- Tradeoffs and tensions
- Common misconceptions
- Checklist or steps (non-advisory)
- Reference table or matrix
Definition and scope
The Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines are a codified set of sentencing standards established under Minnesota Statutes § 244.09 and maintained by the Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines Commission (MSGC). The MSGC is a nine-member body created by the Minnesota Legislature in 1978 and charged with developing, monitoring, and revising guidelines to promote proportionality and consistency in felony sentencing.
The guidelines apply exclusively to adult felony offenders sentenced in Minnesota state district courts. Gross misdemeanor and misdemeanor offenses are governed by statutory maximums set in individual criminal statutes rather than by the guidelines grid. Juvenile adjudications, civil commitment proceedings, and federal offenses prosecuted in Minnesota's federal district court fall entirely outside the guidelines' scope.
Scope and coverage limitations: This page addresses Minnesota state felony sentencing standards only. Federal sentencing in Minnesota is governed by the United States Sentencing Guidelines (USSG) administered by the U.S. Sentencing Commission — a separate framework with distinct offense levels, criminal history categories, and mandatory minimum structures. Offenses prosecuted in Minnesota's 11 federally recognized tribal courts are subject to tribal law and federal Indian law, not the MSGC guidelines. For the broader regulatory environment governing Minnesota's legal system, see Regulatory Context for Minnesota's Legal System.
Core mechanics or structure
The operational foundation of the guidelines is a two-dimensional sentencing grid. The vertical axis lists 11 offense severity levels (ranked I through XI, with XI representing the most serious). The horizontal axis tracks criminal history score (0 through 6 or more). Each cell in the grid contains a presumptive sentence expressed in months of imprisonment.
The grid is divided into a dispositional line and a durational range:
- Dispositional line: Cells to the upper-right of this diagonal indicate presumptive imprisonment. Cells to the lower-left indicate presumptive stayed sentences (probation).
- Durational range: Each prison cell contains a recommended duration (e.g., 48 months) plus a range 15% above and 15% below, within which a judge may sentence without triggering a formal departure.
Criminal history score is calculated by assigning point values to prior felony convictions (1 point each, with some offenses weighted), prior gross misdemeanor convictions (0.5 points each), prior misdemeanor convictions (0.25 points each), and custody status at the time of the offense (1 additional point if on probation, parole, or supervised release). The cumulative score determines the horizontal grid cell.
Offense severity level is assigned by statute and MSGC policy. First-degree murder, for example, carries a mandatory life sentence under Minnesota Statutes § 609.185 and operates outside the standard grid. Most drug and property felonies fall in levels II through VI; violent and sex offenses typically occupy levels VII through X.
Causal relationships or drivers
The 1978 legislative mandate creating the MSGC was a direct response to documented sentencing disparities under the prior indeterminate sentencing model, in which judges held near-absolute discretion and parole boards determined actual release dates. The Determinate Sentencing Act, enacted by the Minnesota Legislature, shifted authority to the front end of the process — judges at sentencing rather than parole boards post-incarceration.
Several statutory drivers shape how sentences move along the grid:
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Aggravating factors — codified in Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines 2.D.2 — include particular cruelty, major economic offense, presence of a child during a violent crime, and offense committed for the benefit of a gang. Each can justify an upward durational departure or, in some cases, an upward dispositional departure (imposing prison where probation was presumptive).
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Mitigating factors — listed in MSGC 2.D.3 — include the offender's minor role, the victim's provocation, and age-related cognitive limitations. These support downward departures.
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Mandatory minimums imposed by the Legislature — separate from the grid — require minimum incarceration periods for offenses such as first-degree controlled substance crimes under Minnesota Statutes § 152.021 or certain firearms offenses under § 609.11. Mandatory minimums operate as a floor regardless of grid cell placement.
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Subsequent felony convictions increase the criminal history score, mechanically shifting the grid cell rightward and increasing the presumptive sentence length.
For procedural context on how these factors are raised and contested in court, the Minnesota Rules of Criminal Procedure govern the evidentiary standards applicable at sentencing hearings.
Classification boundaries
The MSGC maintains a distinct classification system for sex offenses, which operate under a modified grid with different presumptive disposition lines and enhanced criminal history scoring for prior sex convictions. Predatory offender registration requirements under Minnesota Statutes § 243.166 interact with but are separate from the sentencing grid itself.
Drug offense classification was substantially restructured by the Drug Sentencing Reform Act of 2016 (Minnesota Session Laws, Chapter 160), which reduced mandatory minimums and created new offense levels for low-quantity possession. The MSGC grid has 5 drug severity levels (D1 through D6, with D1 being most serious) integrated into the main grid's offense severity levels.
Dangerous offender and career offender statutes under Minnesota Statutes § 609.1095 allow courts to impose longer sentences for repeat violent offenders, but only upon specific factual findings, which have been subject to Sixth Amendment scrutiny following Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S. 296 (2004).
The full sentencing grid and all offense severity rankings are published in the current MSGC guidelines document available at mn.gov/sentencing-guidelines.
Tradeoffs and tensions
The guidelines create a structural tension between uniformity and individualized justice. The presumptive sentence is legally and statistically designed to apply to the modal offender; it cannot anticipate every factual configuration. Judicial departure authority exists precisely because the legislature recognized that rigid application would produce unjust outcomes in atypical cases.
A second tension exists between legislative mandatory minimums and grid-based presumptive sentences. When the legislature enacts a mandatory minimum that exceeds the grid's presumptive sentence, the mandatory minimum controls — effectively overriding the commission's calibrated framework. Critics, including the MSGC itself in published policy reports, have noted that this creates inconsistencies between offense-severity level rankings and actual incarceration floors.
A third contested area involves prosecutorial charging discretion. Because the offense severity level is determined by the charged and convicted offense — not by the underlying conduct — prosecutors can influence the grid cell through charge selection. A defendant whose conduct falls between two severity levels may receive meaningfully different presumptive sentences depending on which charge is pursued and accepted at plea.
The Minnesota public defender system and defense bar have raised equity concerns about how criminal history scoring disproportionately accumulates for defendants with prior minor convictions, creating compounding grid effects in subsequent cases.
Common misconceptions
Misconception 1: The guidelines are merely advisory. In Minnesota, the presumptive sentence is legally binding unless a court articulates substantial and compelling reasons for departure in writing. The Minnesota Court of Appeals reviews departure decisions, and the MSGC publishes annual departure rate data. The guidelines carry far more legal weight than advisory systems used in some other states.
Misconception 2: A stayed sentence means no consequences. A stayed (probationary) sentence under the guidelines still constitutes a felony conviction on the defendant's record and contributes to future criminal history scores. For expungement eligibility and related consequences, see Minnesota Expungement Law.
Misconception 3: Good behavior automatically reduces a prison sentence. Under the determinate model, Minnesota felony sentences are served at a fixed two-thirds/one-third ratio: two-thirds in custody, one-third on supervised release (formerly called "conditional release"), as set by Minnesota Statutes § 244.101. Supervised release can be revoked, but the structure is not discretionary parole — there is no parole board reviewing individual readiness for release.
Misconception 4: The grid applies to all criminal cases. The grid applies only to adult felony offenses in state district court. Gross misdemeanors carry a statutory maximum of 1 year under Minnesota Statutes § 609.02, subd. 4, and sentences within that range are set by judicial discretion, not by a grid.
Checklist or steps (non-advisory)
The following sequence describes the procedural steps through which a presumptive sentence is calculated and imposed in a Minnesota felony case. This is a structural description of the process, not legal guidance.
Step 1 — Offense level assignment
The convicted offense is matched to its designated severity level on the MSGC grid, as listed in the current guidelines' offense severity reference table.
Step 2 — Criminal history score calculation
A presentence investigation (PSI) is conducted by Minnesota Department of Corrections staff. Prior convictions are scored per MSGC rules: 1 point per prior felony, 0.5 per prior gross misdemeanor, 0.25 per prior misdemeanor, plus any custody status point.
Step 3 — Grid cell identification
The offense severity level and criminal history score intersect at a specific grid cell containing the presumptive sentence in months and the 15%-above/15%-below durational range.
Step 4 — Dispositional determination
The court determines whether the grid cell falls above or below the dispositional line — indicating whether prison or stayed sentence is presumptive.
Step 5 — Departure analysis (if applicable)
If the prosecutor or defense argues for a departure, aggravating or mitigating factors under MSGC 2.D are identified and argued at the sentencing hearing.
Step 6 — Judicial findings and written order
The court issues its sentence. Any departure from the presumptive sentence requires written findings stating substantial and compelling reasons, reviewable on appeal through the Minnesota Court of Appeals.
Step 7 — Supervised release calculation
If a prison sentence is imposed, the Department of Corrections calculates the supervised release term (one-third of the pronounced sentence) per § 244.101.
Reference table or matrix
Minnesota Sentencing Grid — Selected Offense Examples (Illustrative)
| Offense Severity Level | Example Offense | Criminal History 0 (Presumptive) | Criminal History 3 (Presumptive) | Criminal History 6+ (Presumptive) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Level II | Theft ($1,000–$5,000) | Stayed | Stayed | 13 months |
| Level IV | Felony DWI (3rd offense) | Stayed | Stayed | 24 months |
| Level VI | Assault — 2nd degree | Stayed | 21 months | 36 months |
| Level VIII | Criminal sexual conduct — 3rd degree | 48 months | 72 months | 103 months |
| Level IX | Robbery — 1st degree | 58 months | 98 months | 139 months |
| Level X | Murder — 3rd degree | 150 months | 200 months | 261 months |
Source: Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines Commission, 2023 Sentencing Guidelines. Cell values shown are presumptive midpoints; actual grid includes 15% range bands. First-degree murder (§ 609.185) carries a mandatory life sentence outside this grid.
Criminal History Score Point Values
| Prior Conviction Type | Points Assigned |
|---|---|
| Felony conviction | 1.0 |
| Gross misdemeanor | 0.5 |
| Misdemeanor | 0.25 |
| Custody status at time of offense | 1.0 |
Source: MSGC Guidelines, Section 2.B (mn.gov/sentencing-guidelines)
The full interactive sentencing grid, including all 11 severity levels and the complete offense severity reference table, is maintained by the MSGC at mn.gov/sentencing-guidelines/guidelines/. The Minnesota Legal Services Authority home page provides entry points to related criminal law reference materials on this network.
References
- Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines Commission (MSGC) — Official guidelines text, grid, departure data, and annual reports
- Minnesota Statutes § 244.09 — Sentencing Guidelines Commission — Enabling statute for the MSGC
- Minnesota Statutes § 244.101 — Determinate Sentencing; Supervised Release — Two-thirds/one-third release structure
- Minnesota Statutes § 609.185 — Murder in the First Degree — Mandatory life sentence provision
- Minnesota Statutes § 609.1095 — Dangerous and Career Offenders — Enhanced sentencing authority
- Minnesota Statutes § 152.021 — Controlled Substance Crime, First Degree — Drug mandatory minimum reference
- Minnesota Statutes § 243.166 — Predatory Offender Registration — Sex offender registration statute
- Minnesota Statutes § 609.02 — Definitions — Classification of gross misdemeanors and misdemeanors
- Minnesota Office of the Revisor of Statutes — Official repository for Minnesota Statutes and Session Laws
- U.S. Sentencing Commission — 2023 Guidelines Manual — Federal sentencing framework applicable in Minnesota federal courts
- Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S. 296 (2004) — Sixth Amendment constraints on judicial factfinding at sentencing
- Minnesota Department of Corrections — Administers supervised release calculations and presentence investigations