This data is for informational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your transplant team for decisions about your care.

States › Minnesota

Minnesota Transplant Centers

4 transplant centers in Minnesota. Source: SRTR, November 2025.

Data Insight

Minnesota: 4 SRTR-tracked transplant centers · covering 6 organ types · 3,185 reported procedures · 2,076 on combined waitlist · 94.5% volume-weighted 1-year graft survival.

Transplant activity varies widely from one state to the next because donor availability, the number of accredited transplant centers, and regional organ-sharing rules all differ. A state with several high-volume programs may report shorter waiting times for some organs and longer ones for others, depending on local demand and the mix of blood types and medical urgency among listed candidates. The counts below reflect programs physically located in this state; many patients also list at — or travel to — centers across state lines, so these totals do not capture every resident who ultimately receives a transplant. Survival rates are risk-adjusted by the SRTR so that programs accepting sicker or higher-risk recipients are compared fairly. Treat these state-level figures as a starting point, then open the individual center pages for organ-specific volume, waitlist size, and outcomes before drawing any conclusions.

See the per-organ summary table for Minnesota-specific breakdowns. SRTR/OPTN methodology and patient-selection guidance

State Summary by Organ

Organ Centers Waitlist Transplants Avg 1-yr Survival
Heart 1 3 18 100.0%
Kidney 4 1,637 1,805 96.4%
Kidney-Pancreas 2 176 193 91.1%
Liver 2 153 862 94.8%
Lung 2 29 223 90.0%
Pancreas 2 78 84 N/A

Nearby Transplant Centers in Minnesota

Featured centers from this state — click through for program-level SRTR data.

Reading Minnesota Transplant Data

The transplant programs operating in Minnesota sit inside a larger national allocation network. When a donor organ becomes available, OPTN policy ranks candidates from across multiple states based on medical urgency, blood type compatibility, body size matching, and (for some organ types) geographic distance from the donor hospital. That means a Minnesota resident may receive an organ donated in a neighboring state, and a donor organ recovered in Minnesota may travel out of state to the most urgent compatible recipient. State-level center listings are therefore best read as a directory of programs accessible to Minnesota patients, not as a measure of Minnesota's share of national transplant volume.

Center-to-center variation within Minnesota can be substantial. A high-volume academic medical center will typically report different risk-adjusted survival numbers than a smaller community program, and the two may accept very different referral populations. When comparing centers within Minnesota, consider the organ-specific ranking pages — survival adjustments and confidence intervals are organ-specific — rather than aggregate all-organ comparisons. The Compare view at the page link above allows side-by-side review of any two Minnesota programs by organ type.

Patients listed at multiple programs (a practice called multi-listing) sometimes use state boundaries strategically to access different OPTN geographic zones. Multi-listing is allowed by national policy, but practical eligibility depends on the listing center's residency, insurance, and clinical follow-up rules. Discuss multi-listing possibilities with your nephrologist, hepatologist, cardiologist, or pulmonologist before pursuing it — there are clinical, financial, and logistical considerations that the published center pages cannot capture.

Data Sources

  • SRTR Program-Specific Reports (November 2025 release) — transplant center and program-level data for Minnesota. srtr.org
  • OPTN allocation policy library — organ allocation rules governing interstate organ flow. optn.transplant.hrsa.gov

About This Data

This data is for informational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your transplant team for decisions about your care.

Source: Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) Program-Specific Reports (CSRS 2511) · November 2025 State-level aggregates derived from program-specific data; see methodology.