
To collect unpaid wages in Minnesota, send your employer a written demand for payment. If they don’t pay within 24 hours (terminated employees) or by your next scheduled payday (resigned employees), daily penalties begin accruing under state law. You can also file a complaint with the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry or pursue a private lawsuit. Minnesota law requires your employer to pay your attorney fees if you prevail.
If your employer isn’t paying wages, commissions, or overtime pay you earned, that’s illegal. Bills don’t stop because your employer decides not to pay, and the longer it goes unaddressed, the harder it becomes to recover what you’re owed.
Below is the full process, from calculating what you’re owed to filing a claim if your employer won’t pay.
Key Takeaways
-
- Minnesota requires employers to pay all earned wages and commissions on time, including overtime, paid time off (PTO), and banked sick time, where a policy or practice of payment exists.
- Unauthorized paycheck deductions are illegal under Minn. Stat. 181.79. If your employer made one, they owe you twice the amount deducted.
- A written wage demand triggers Minnesota’s penalty provisions. Terminated employees who aren’t paid within 24 hours of demand can collect daily penalties up to 15 days under Minn. Stat. 181.13. Resigned employees must also demand payment after their regular payday deadline passes, under Minn. Stat. 181.14.
- Overtime violations carry double damages under both state and federal law.
- Minnesota wage claims must be filed within two years (Minn. Stat. 541.07(5)), or three years if the nonpayment was willful. The same deadlines apply to federal FLSA claims.
- If you prevail on a wage claim, your employer pays your attorney fees under Minn. Stat. 181.171, so the cost of a lawyer doesn’t have to stop you from pursuing what you’re owed.
For a legal consultation, call 612-349-2729
Steps You Can Take to Collect Your Unpaid Wages and Commissions in Minnesota
Minnesota law gives employees a clear path to recover what they’re owed. Here’s what to do, in order.
Step 1: Figure Out What You’re Owed.
The first thing you need to do is figure out how much your employer owes you in wages and commissions. If you’re an hourly employee and your employer hasn’t paid you for all the hours you worked, start with the base calculation: multiply the number of hours worked but unpaid by your hourly rate. That gives you straight wages owed.
Your calculations don’t end there. Consider the following questions:
- Was there overtime that you worked but weren’t paid for? Under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (29 U.S.C. 207), you’re owed unpaid overtime pay at time and a half for all hours worked over 40 in a workweek. This federal threshold applies to the vast majority of Minnesota employers. Minnesota state law sets its own overtime threshold at 48 hours per workweek under Minn. Stat. 177.25, but in practice, the federal 40-hour rule controls for most workers because it’s the more protective standard.
- Did your employer ever make you work off the clock? That is: were you required to perform work while not clocked in? If yes, you’re entitled to be paid for that time under the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Minnesota Fair Labor Standards Act.
- Did your employer pay employees for banked sick time, PTO, or vacation time? What does it say in your employee handbook about unused vacation, PTO, and sick time? If there’s a practice or policy of paying for that time, that constitutes wages owed to you under Minn. Stat. 181.101.
- If you’re a commissioned employee, review your sales or employment contract to determine what you’re owed. Independent contractor commissioned salespersons have separate protections under Minn. Stat. 181.145.
One more thing before moving to Step 2. Minnesota law gives current and former employees the right to request a copy of their personnel file from their employer under Minn. Stat. 181.961. Your file typically includes employment agreements, pay history, commission plans, timecards, and any paycheck deduction authorization, the documents you need to calculate and prove your claim. Request it in writing and keep a copy of that request.
Exception: If you handled company money or property during employment, your employer has 10 additional calendar days to audit accounts before the payment deadline begins (Minn. Stat. 181.14, subd. 4).

Step 2: Figure Out If Your Employer Took Improper Deductions
Under Minnesota law, your employer cannot deduct money from your paycheck for broken equipment, uniforms, lost or stolen property, training costs, unmet sales goals, or any other claimed debt unless you signed a written authorization after the specific loss or debt arose. That rule is Minn. Stat. 181.79.
Employers sometimes withhold final paychecks entirely or make deductions when they believe you owe them something. Even if the underlying dispute is legitimate, they cannot take it out of your wages unilaterally.
Go back through your pay stubs and flag any deductions. If your employer took money without your written post-incident authorization, they owe you that amount back, plus an equal amount on top as a penalty under Minn. Stat. 181.79.
Step 3: Send Your Employer a Written Demand for Payment
After you determine how much you’re owed (see steps 1 and 2), send your employer a written demand for your wages via email or letter. Make sure to save a copy of your demand letter for your records. This step matters beyond basic communication; it triggers the penalty provisions under Minnesota law.
Before you send the letter, identify which statute applies to your situation, since that determines which penalties your employer faces:
- Terminated employee: Minn. Stat. 181.13
- Resigned employee: Minn. Stat. 181.14
- Independent contractor commissioned salesperson: Minn. Stat. 181.145
- Improper paycheck deductions: Minn. Stat. 181.79
Use the matching statute in the template below where indicated.
Date: _____________
To: Human Resources, Attention [NAME]
[YOUR EMPLOYER’S COMPANY NAME]
[COMPANY ADDRESS]
From: [YOUR NAME and ADDRESS]
Regarding: Demand for payment of wages
Pursuant to [Minn. Stat. 181.13 / 181.14 / 181.145 – use whichever applies to your situation], I request that you pay me all wages and compensation I am owed. I am owed the following amounts:
[$ AMOUNT] in straight hourly pay;
[$ AMOUNT] in overtime;
[S AMOUNT] in banked PTO, sick, and vacation time; and
[$ AMOUNT] in unpaid commissions. [Adjust these amounts and categories based on your situation.]
Please send a check for the full amount to: [YOUR ADDRESS].
Sincerely,
[YOUR NAME]
Minnesota law prohibits your employer from retaliating against you for making a wage claim under Minn. Stat. 181.932. If you face demotion, reduced hours, or termination after sending this letter, that retaliation is a separate legal violation, and it gives you additional grounds for a claim.
Step 4: Calculate Penalties If Your Employer Doesn’t Pay
If your employer doesn’t pay after you send your written demand, Minnesota law imposes penalties that your employer owes directly to you. How those penalties work depends on how your employment ended.
If you were terminated: Your wages were due immediately on demand. If your employer hasn’t paid within 24 hours of your written demand, daily penalties begin accruing under Minn. Stat. 181.13 at your average daily earnings, up to 15 days.
Example: If you earned $55,000 per year, your average daily rate is approximately $211 ($55,000 ÷ 260 working days). If your employer remains in default for the full 15 days, the penalty alone totals $3,165, on top of the wages already owed.
If you resigned: Your employer has until your next regularly scheduled payday to pay you in full. The 24-hour penalty clock under Minn. Stat. 181.14 only starts after that deadline passes and you’ve made a written demand. Many resigned employees need to send a second demand letter after that payday comes and goes to properly trigger the penalty provisions.
Other remedies may also apply. Overtime violations carry double damages under state and federal law. Unlawful deductions require your employer to pay twice the deducted amount under Minn. Stat. 181.79. If you prevail in court, your employer covers your attorney fees under Minn. Stat. 181.171.

Step 5: File a Wage Claim or Pursue a Private Lawsuit
If your employer ignored your demand or disputes the amount, you have three options. You can hire an employment attorney. Madia Law LLC takes unpaid wage cases on contingency, so you pay nothing unless we recover for you. You can file a wage claim directly with the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry at 651-284-5075, or submit a complaint to the Minnesota Attorney General’s Wage Theft Unit at 651-296-3353. Filing a state claim does not prevent you from also pursuing a private lawsuit.
Minnesota state and federal wage claims must be filed within two years, or three years for willful violations (Minn. Stat. 541.07(5)). Missing either deadline bars your claim entirely.
If your employer’s wage violations affect multiple employees, for example, a companywide off-the-clock policy, misclassification, or a uniform commission plan, the claim may qualify as a class action under the Fair Labor Standards Act or Minnesota law, which can increase total recovery for everyone affected.
Contact Madia Law LLC
If your employer owes you wages, commissions, or overtime, Madia Law LLC is ready to help. Our employment lawyers represent Minnesota workers in unpaid wage cases at no upfront cost. You pay nothing unless we recover for you.

Call us at (612) 349-2729 or complete a case evaluation form.
Click to contact our personal injury lawyers today
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Bonuses Considered Wages Under Minnesota Law?
Yes. Bonuses earned or promised as part of your compensation are wages under Minnesota employment law. If your employer withholds a promised bonus after termination or resignation, the same demand and penalty process that applies to unpaid hourly wages applies to that bonus.
Can I Sue My Employer in Conciliation Court for Unpaid Wages?
Yes. If the total unpaid wages and penalties are $20,000 or less, you can sue in the Minnesota Conciliation Court without a lawyer. Above $20,000, the case moves to the District Court, where legal representation becomes important.
What Happens If My Employer Files for Bankruptcy Before Paying Me?
Wage claims are priority claims in bankruptcy; employees get paid before most other creditors. But you have to file to get that protection. File a proof of claim with the bankruptcy court in your employer’s district as soon as possible. Find the correct court at uscourts.gov/court-locator. Missing the deadline forfeits your priority status entirely. If you’re unsure which court has the case or when the deadline is, call us at (612) 349-2729.
Does Minnesota Have a Wage Theft Law?
Yes. Minnesota’s Wage Theft Prevention Act requires employers to pay all earned wages on time and maintain accurate payroll records. Depending on the amount stolen and the circumstances, violations can lead to criminal charges, including fines of up to $100,000 and prison sentences of up to 20 years for the most serious offenses.
What If My Employer Withholds My Final Paycheck Over a Dispute?
Your employer cannot withhold your final paycheck over a dispute. Minnesota law requires full payment of all earned wages regardless of any claim your employer has against you. If you were terminated, send a written demand — the penalty clock starts within 24 hours under Minn. Stat. 181.13. If you resigned, your employer has until your next regular payday to pay (Minn. Stat. 181.14). If that deadline passes without payment, send a written demand, and the 24-hour penalty clock begins at that point.
Meet J. Ashwin Madia and Our Trial Team
Wage claims move fast. Deadlines are short, penalties accrue daily, and employers have legal teams ready. You need lawyers who know Minnesota wage law and know how to fight for what you’re owed.
| J. Ashwin Madia
Trial attorney and founder of Madia Law LLC. Former U.S. Marine Corps judge advocate with 100+ jury trials. Fellow: American College of Trial Lawyers, International Academy of Trial Lawyers, American Board of Trial Advocates. |
Zane A. Umsted
Trial and appellate attorney focused on research, briefing, and argument in state and federal courts. Board member, Minnesota Chapter of the National Employment Lawyers Association. Minnesota Super Lawyers Rising Star. |
Tara Jensen
Employment and civil rights litigator with over 15 years of experience in discrimination, retaliation, wage and hour, and sexual harassment cases. Former law clerk, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York. Admitted in Minnesota and New York. |
Call 612-349-2729 or complete a Case Evaluation form