How to Buy Monero (XMR) in Minnesota
Monero is generally not available to Minnesota residents through regulated US exchanges.
Limited availability
The major US-licensed exchanges have delisted Monero or never listed it because its privacy features make federal anti-money-laundering reporting impractical. Holding Monero is legal in Minnesota. Buying it requires going outside the regulated channel: atomic swaps, decentralized exchanges, or peer-to-peer.
What to know
Common questions
Is it legal to hold Monero in Minnesota?
Yes. Personal ownership is legal. The restriction is on regulated US exchanges offering it, not on what you can hold.
How does a Minnesota resident buy Monero?
The common path is buying Bitcoin on an US-licensed exchange, withdrawing to a self-custody wallet, and atomic-swapping to Monero through a non-custodial service. Peer-to-peer venues and decentralized exchanges are alternatives.
Does SF 3868 affect Monero?
No. SF 3868 is about physical crypto kiosks, not about which coins online exchanges list. Monero availability is set at the federal level.
Do I owe tax on Monero gains in Minnesota?
Yes. Federal capital-gains tax applies, plus Minnesota state income tax on the gain at your normal rate. The off-exchange nature of the trade does not change the obligation to report.
Is atomic swapping into Monero risky?
Riskier than a regulated exchange. You manage your own keys, there is no customer support, and you have to trust the swap service. Most users start small to learn the workflow.
Buy XMR without a regulated exchange
Regulated exchange access to Monero in Minnesota is limited. Acquire ZEC on a regulated exchange, then swap ZEC to XMR through ChangeNOW. The XMR lands in a wallet you control.
Protect your privacy. Encrypt your connection.
Your ISP logs every domain you visit. Shielded transactions protect what happens on-chain. Your ISP sees what happens before you ever open a wallet. These are two different layers, and coin privacy doesn't fix connection privacy. Proton VPN encrypts that traffic so your ISP sees only that you're connected, not what you're reading. Swiss-based, independently audited, open-source.
Legal & regulatory detail
Federal US rules apply. State money transmitter license required. St. Paul city kiosk ban effective December 21, 2025. SF 3868 statewide kiosk ban passed Senate April 9, 2026, received by House and pending final vote.