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State name-change procedure

Minnesota name-change procedure

Minnesota district court handles name changes; publication is court-directed rather than mandatory by statute. Felony conviction triggers extended notice procedure.

Procedure researched from primary state-legislature sources. Independent family-law attorney review pending.

At a glance

Minnesota at a glance

  • Filing court: District Court of the petitioner's county.
  • Filing fee: $285. Fee waiver available for indigent petitioners.
  • Typical timeline: 30 days from filing to order for an uncontested adult petition.
  • Publication requirement varies by court.
  • Hearing or paper review depends on judge / county.
  • Fingerprint or criminal-history check required before order issues.

Petition requirements

Two-step (file + publish)

Last verified: 2026-05-06

Filing court
District Court of the petitioner's countyState court self-help →
Filing fee
$285Fee waiver available (In Forma Pauperis Petition)
Waiting period
30 days
Publication
Varies by countyCourt may waive on showing of safety concerns; sealed records procedure available for DV/safety.
Hearing
Either (judge's discretion)
Background check
RequiredPetitioners with felony conviction subject to additional notice and waiting requirements (Minn. Stat. §259.13).

Statute

Minn. Stat. §259.10 et seq.Verified 2026-05-06

District court grants name change on application; notice to state required (no general publication mandate, but court may direct).

Minor name changes

Both parents must consent or be served; best-interest standard.

Common questions

Minnesota name-change FAQ

Reasons for legal name change

Reasons for legal name change in Minnesota

Listed alphabetically. The procedure above applies the same way to every reason — courts evaluate the petitioner against the statute, not against the reason.

Divorce / restore prior name

Restoring a birth name or prior surname after divorce. Many states allow restoration to be requested in the divorce decree itself; if missed, a separate name-change petition (or post-decree motion) is the path.

Gender affirmation

Changing legal name to match gender identity. Procedurally identical to other reasons in most states; some states' publication requirement is waivable on documented safety grounds.

Identity, religious, or cultural reasons

Reclamation of a heritage or cultural name, religious conversion, or any other personal-identity reason. Procedurally the same as any other reason — courts do not evaluate the merit of the reason, only whether the petitioner satisfies the statute.

Marriage

Most states accept the marriage certificate as sufficient evidence to update SSA, DMV, and passport without a separate court petition. A petition is needed only when seeking a name not derived from the marriage record (e.g., a hyphenation not on the certificate).

Minor name change

Changing a child's legal name. Procedurally distinct in nearly every state — typically requires other-parent consent or notice, a best-interest-of-child standard, and sometimes a guardian ad litem. See the Minors pillar.

Personal preference

Any other personal-preference reason. Courts do not require justification; they evaluate against the statute (no fraud, no creditor evasion, no minor without consent, etc.).

Post-emancipation

Newly emancipated minor choosing a different legal name. Standard adult petition once emancipation is on record.

Post-naturalization

Choosing a name different from the port-of-entry record after becoming a US citizen. May be done at the naturalization ceremony (no separate petition) or via the standard state petition later.

Full equal-weight reasons guide: /reasons-without-judgment

After-court update sequence

Once the Minnesota court order is signed, update SSA → DMV → passport → employer → banks → licenses → voter.

Open the checklist →

Minor name changes in Minnesota

Both parents must consent or be served; best-interest standard.

Minors pillar →

Optional: hire someone

Have an attorney handle it

Filing the petition yourself is allowed in every state. If you'd rather have a licensed family-law attorney prepare the paperwork and appear at any required hearing, our affiliate partner LegalZoom connects you with one.

See attorney options

Affiliate disclosure: we earn a referral fee. This does not change the price you pay.

Verification. Statute and procedural data on this page were verified against primary state-legislature sources on 2026-05-06. Filing fees and procedural rules can change between fee schedules — confirm the current fee with the Minnesota court self-help office before filing. This page is informational, not legal advice.

After the order

Done in Minnesota? Update your records.

Social Security first, then DMV, then passport, then everything else. The After-court Checklist is a printable, calendar-exportable sequence.

Informational, not legal advice.