How Minnesota's Burn Permit System Works
Minnesota's fire season is concentrated in the spring, after snowmelt exposes dry dormant vegetation before green-up. The DNR Forestry division issues permits through a network of area foresters and district offices. For most residential burning, a quick call to your county DNR office is sufficient. Permit issuance depends on current fire danger conditions.
Getting a Minnesota Burn Permit
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Permit Agency | MN DNR Division of Forestry |
| Phone | (651) 296-6157 |
| Online Portal | https://www.dnr.state.mn.us/forestry |
| Cost | Free |
| Validity | Same day |
Seasonal Rules & Burn Bans
Spring dry season (April–May) is primary fire risk. DNR issues burn restrictions during high fire danger. Summer generally low-risk. Fall window possible. North woods fire activity increasing with drought years.
What You Can Burn in Minnesota
Natural vegetation, yard debris. No prohibited materials. Northern Minnesota slash and silvicultural burns have separate MFS coordination requirements.
- Leaves and natural yard debris
- Brush, branches, and untreated natural wood
- Downed trees from your property (unpainted, untreated)
- Agricultural crop residue (with appropriate permit)
Frequently Asked Questions — Minnesota
During dry conditions (primarily spring), yes — a DNR permit is required for open burning of vegetation. Outside high-risk periods, local ordinances apply. Contact your county DNR forestry office to confirm current requirements.
Late fall (October–November) when leaves have fallen and first frosts have arrived is a generally safe window. Spring (March, early April before dry-out) can work. Avoid the mid-April through early June peak spring fire period.
Most Twin Cities metro communities prohibit open burning by local ordinance. Check your city or county's open burning rules. Many metro areas allow only contained recreational fires, not debris burns.