Minnesota requires financial literacy education for public school students, with mandates effective since 2010. The state has 16 financial literacy standards spanning 7 topic areas, covering grades 6-8, 9-12.

Last updated: March 2026

16 Standards
7 Topic Areas
required Mandate Status
6-8, 9-12 Grade Levels

Does Minnesota Require Financial Literacy Education?

Yes. Minnesota requires financial literacy instruction for public school students. Minnesota requires financial literacy instruction as part of social studies standards. Students must demonstrate competency in personal finance concepts including banking, credit, budgeting, and investing before graduation.

Mandate Details

Status
required
Effective Year
2010
Standalone Course
No
Grade Levels
6-8, 9-12

Key Agencies

State agency overseeing K-12 education, standards, and procurement compliance
Represents school boards and provides purchasing guidance to member districts
What this means for districts: Schools must adopt curriculum that aligns to Minnesota's 16 financial literacy standards. Districts need to verify that their chosen curriculum maps to these specific requirements.

What Are Minnesota's Financial Literacy Standards?

Minnesota has 16 financial literacy standards organized across 7 topic areas. These topics range from Financial Decision-Making & Behavior and Consumer Protection & Fraud to Insurance & Risk Management, covering the full spectrum of personal finance education.

2 standards
Financial Decision-Making & Behavior
1 standard
Consumer Protection & Fraud
1 standard
Credit & Debt
1 standard
Investing
1 standard
Budgeting & Cash Flow
1 standard
Net Worth & Wealth Building
1 standard
Insurance & Risk Management

How Minnesota School Districts Adopt Financial Literacy Curriculum

Minnesota is an open territory state, meaning individual districts have the authority to select and purchase curriculum directly without state-level approval. Minnesota does not maintain a state adoption list. Districts have broad autonomy in selecting instructional materials, though they must align with state academic standards.

Purchasing Process

Individual districts conduct their own procurement processes, often through RFPs or direct purchasing. Some districts participate in cooperative purchasing agreements to leverage volume discounts.

Decision Level

Educational material selection decisions are made at the district level, with curriculum committees and administrators evaluating vendor proposals against district needs and state standards.

Cooperative Purchasing Options

Metro Transit Cooperative MEEC (Minnesota Educational Equipment Cooperative) School District Purchasing Cooperative (district-level agreements) National Cooperative Purchasing Alliance (NCPA)

Curriculum That Meets Minnesota's Financial Literacy Standards

Districts looking for a standards-aligned financial literacy curriculum can use iKnowFi Academy — a self-paced, online platform built on the Absorb LMS that maps directly to Minnesota's learning objectives. iKnowFi Academy covers 16 of 16 standards (100.0% coverage) across 6 courses.

Minnesota Standards Coverage

100.0%
16 of 16 standards covered 6 courses

Aligned Courses

Borrowing Money

2 modules · 2 standards aligned

Establishing Credit

1 module · 1 standard aligned

Financial Building Blocks

1 module · 2 standards aligned

Financial Preparation and Recovery

1 module · 1 standard aligned

Managing Your Money

1 module · 7 standards aligned

Your Financial Future

1 module · 3 standards aligned

Minnesota's Financial Literacy Standards & iKnowFi Academy Alignment

All 16 standards — 16 covered by iKnowFi Academy.

Financial Decision-Making & Behavior 2/2 covered
ID Standard Grade iKnowFi Academy Course
9.2.2 Establish financial goals
(+2 more)
  • make a financial plan considering budgeting and asset building to meet those goals
  • and determine ways to track the success of the plan.
High School (Grades 9-12) Financial Building Blocks
9.2.3 Identify the incentives and trade-offs related to a choice made by an individual, household, organization or government
(+2 more)
  • describe the opportunity cost of a choice
  • and analyze the consequences of a choice (both intended and unintended).
High School (Grades 9-12) Managing Your Money
Consumer Protection & Fraud 1/1 covered
ID Standard Grade iKnowFi Academy Course
9.2.2 Explain the pricing, sales, advertising and other marketing strategies used to sell products from a consumer perspective. High School (Grades 9-12) Managing Your Money
Credit & Debt 1/1 covered
ID Standard Grade iKnowFi Academy Course
9.2.2 Evaluate the benefits and costs of credit
(+1 more)
  • describe the “three C’s” of credit (character, capacity and collateral) and explain how these attributes can affect one's ability to borrow, rent, get a job and achieve other financial goals.
High School (Grades 9-12) Establishing Credit
Investing 1/1 covered
ID Standard Grade iKnowFi Academy Course
9.2.2 Evaluate investment options using criteria such as risk, return, liquidity and time horizon
(+1 more)
  • evaluate and apply risk-management strategies in investing and insuring decisions.
High School (Grades 9-12) Your Financial Future
Budgeting & Cash Flow 1/1 covered
ID Standard Grade iKnowFi Academy Course
9.2.2 Establish financial goals
(+2 more)
  • make a financial plan considering budgeting and asset building to meet those goals
  • and determine ways to track the success of the plan.
High School (Grades 9-12) Financial Building Blocks
Net Worth & Wealth Building 1/1 covered
ID Standard Grade iKnowFi Academy Course
9.2.2 Establish financial goals
(+2 more)
  • make a financial plan considering budgeting and asset building to meet those goals
  • and determine ways to track the success of the plan.
High School (Grades 9-12) Your Financial Future
Insurance & Risk Management 1/1 covered
ID Standard Grade iKnowFi Academy Course
9.2.2 Evaluate investment options using criteria such as risk, return, liquidity and time horizon
(+1 more)
  • evaluate and apply risk-management strategies in investing and insuring decisions.
High School (Grades 9-12) Financial Preparation and Recovery

Minnesota Financial Literacy FAQ

Yes. Minnesota requires financial literacy instruction, effective since 2010.

Minnesota requires financial literacy instruction as part of social studies standards. Students must demonstrate competency in personal finance concepts including banking, credit, budgeting, and investing before graduation.

Minnesota's financial literacy requirement is established by Laws 2023, Chapter 55 (HF 2497), codified at Minn. Stat. 120B.024. Effective 2023-05-24.

Requires all Minnesota high school students beginning with the class entering 9th grade in 2024-2025 to complete a course for credit in personal finance in grades 10, 11, or 12 in order to graduate.

Minnesota's financial literacy standards apply to grades 6-8, 9-12. Standards are integrated into existing coursework.

Minnesota has 16 financial literacy standards spanning 7 topic areas including Financial Decision-Making & Behavior, Consumer Protection & Fraud, Credit & Debt, Investing, Budgeting & Cash Flow.

Minnesota's 16 standards are organized across 7 topics: Financial Decision-Making & Behavior, Consumer Protection & Fraud, Credit & Debt, Investing, Budgeting & Cash Flow, Net Worth & Wealth Building, Insurance & Risk Management.

Minnesota is an open-territory state where individual districts purchase curriculum directly.

Individual districts conduct their own procurement processes, often through RFPs or direct purchasing. Some districts participate in cooperative purchasing agreements to leverage volume discounts.

iKnowFi Academy covers 16 of Minnesota's 16 financial literacy standards (100% coverage) across 6 self-paced online courses.

Each course is aligned to Minnesota's specific learning objectives, built on the Absorb LMS, and includes built-in assessments. Teachers assign them and students work independently.

Get Your Free Minnesota Standards Alignment Report

See exactly how iKnowFi Academy maps to each of Minnesota's 16 financial literacy standards — standard by standard, module by module.

  • 16 of 16 standards covered
  • 6 self-paced courses, ready to assign
  • Built-in assessments and progress tracking
  • No schedule changes needed — students work independently

Ready to see the full alignment?

Free for Minnesota school districts

Request Alignment Report Schedule a Demo
Last updated: March 2026