Black life expectancy in Minnesota
74
years at birth
Life expectancy at birth for Black residents of Minnesota: 74 years (US all-race: 77.5).
US national average: 77.50 years at birth
Historical trend
What this means for Black residents
That figure tracks roughly the US national average of 77.5 years, though the underlying trend and drivers are state-specific.
Life expectancy at birth is the clearest single summary of Black health in Minnesota — it integrates infant mortality, chronic-disease mortality, injury/violence mortality, and the long tail of deaths of despair. The Black-white life-expectancy gap widened during COVID-19 and has only partially recovered. The most-actionable state-level levers on this indicator are hypertension and diabetes control (which together drive about a third of the gap by current CDC decomposition), firearm-injury prevention, and maternal/infant mortality (which contributes disproportionately because deaths young weigh more heavily in life-expectancy math than deaths old).
The figures on this page are drawn from CDC NVSS US Life Tables, which is the canonical public dataset for this indicator. See the References section below for supporting citations from MMWR, NEJM, and JAMA where the underlying drivers have been studied.
Policy actions
Policy levers at the state level for this indicator include Medicaid coverage scope, provider workforce investments, and data transparency mandates. The state's health department publishes the specific programs currently funded via its annual state health plan.
Where to get help in your state
- Primary care in Minnesota: Black Health directory
- FQHCs (sliding-scale primary care): browse clinics
- 988 Lifeline — call or text 988 for mental health crisis support.
References & primary sources
- Primary dataset: CDC NVSS US Life Tables
- Arias E et al. US state life tables. CDC/NCHS. Annual.
- CDC NVSS Mortality Reports. CDC NVSS mortality data
Data refreshed: