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Minnesota Criminal Law

What Is a Stay of Imposition in Minnesota?


At a Glance
  • What:convicted, sentence not imposed.
  • Success:felony to misdemeanor.
  • Limits:firearms, expungement.
  • Middle:ground outcome.

A stay of imposition in Minnesota means you are convicted, but the court postpones imposing the sentence — and if you complete probation successfully, a felony conviction is deemed a misdemeanor on your record. It's most often used in felony cases as a middle-ground outcome: not as protective as a stay of adjudication (which avoids a conviction entirely), but a meaningful step down from a felony that stays a felony. Here's how it works.

How It Works

With a stay of imposition, you're convicted, but the court does not impose the prison or jail sentence — it stays imposition and places you on probation. The key benefit comes at the end: if you complete probation successfully, the felony-level conviction is deemed a misdemeanor on your record under Minnesota law. You incur the consequences of a felony while on probation, but the long-term record reflects a misdemeanor.

Why It Matters

The record reduction is significant. A felony triggers the most serious collateral consequences — firearm loss, licensing barriers, employment problems. Having the conviction deemed a misdemeanor after successful probation softens many of those, even though it remains a conviction.

Where It Sits Among the Options

  • Stay of adjudication: No conviction at all if completed. Most protective.
  • Stay of imposition: Convicted, but felony reduces to misdemeanor on completion. Middle ground.
  • Stay of execution: Convicted and sentenced; sentence held over you. Least favorable stay.

For the full side-by-side, see stay of adjudication vs. stay of imposition.

Who Qualifies

Like other stays, a stay of imposition isn't automatic — it depends on the offense, your history, and negotiation. It's a common and valuable target in felony cases where avoiding a permanent felony conviction is the priority.

Updated May 18, 2026 · Law verified as of June 7, 2026. This article is general information about Minnesota law, not legal advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a stay of imposition mean I'm convicted?

Yes — unlike a stay of adjudication, a stay of imposition involves a conviction. The benefit is that a felony is deemed a misdemeanor on your record after you complete probation.

Will my felony become a misdemeanor?

If you complete probation successfully, the felony-level conviction is deemed a misdemeanor on your record under Minnesota law. During probation, though, you're treated as having a felony.

Is a stay of imposition better than a stay of execution?

Generally yes. A stay of imposition can reduce a felony to a misdemeanor on completion, while a stay of execution keeps the conviction at its original level with the sentence held over you.

How is it different from a stay of adjudication?

A stay of adjudication avoids a conviction entirely if completed; a stay of imposition involves a conviction that reduces to a misdemeanor. The stay of adjudication is more protective when it's available.

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The information on this article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship.

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