List of hospitals in Minnesota

The following List of hospitals in the U.S. state of Minnesota is given in the order of the city where the hospital is or was located. It is also sortable by county, name, health system, and number of staffed beds. Hospitals that have closed are notated with the year of closing. Minnesota's oldest hospital is M Health Fairview's St. Joseph's Hospital in St. Paul, which first opened in 1853 in the Minnesota Territory. The largest hospital, in terms of staffed beds, is Mayo Clinic Hospital - Rochester, which was founded in 1864 by William and Charlie Mayo and has a total of 2,014 beds (1,220 beds at its St. Marys campus and 794 at its Methodist campus). There are twice as many rural hospitals as urban hospitals in Minnesota. In 2017, Minnesota hospitals provided 536,375 inpatient visits and nearly 12.7 million outpatient visits.

Hospitals
According to the Minnesota Department of Health, there were 130 state licensed hospitals with 16,140 beds in 2019. There were an additional six federally licensed hospitals in Minnesota.

Notes:

Defunct hospitals

 * Abbott Hospital, Minneapolis, merged with Northwestern Hospital in 1980
 * Albany Area Hospital and Medical Center, Albany, closed in 2015
 * Albert Lea Hospital and Clinic, Albert Lea (Mayo Clinic Health System), closed in 2019
 * Asbury Hospital, near Elliot Park in Minneapolis, 350 beds, became United States Veterans Hospital Number 68 in 1921.
 * Eitel Hospital, Minneapolis, closed in 1985
 * Fergus Falls Regional Treatment Center, Fergus Falls, closed in 2005
 * Glen Lake Sanatorium, Minnetonka, closed in 1976
 * Dr. E.P. Hawkins Clinic, Hospital, and House, Montrose
 * Lakeside Medical Center, Pine City, closed in 2010
 * Mayo Clinic Health System Springfield, Springfield, HOSP-24, closed in 2020
 * Metropolitan Medical Center, Minneapolis, merged with Mount Sinai Hospital (Minneapolis) in 1990 and closed in 1991 - buildings taken over by Hennepin County Medical Center
 * Midway Hospital, St. Paul, closed in 1997
 * Minnesota Correctional Facility – Faribault (former mental hospital), closed in 1989
 * Minnesota Correctional Facility – Willow River/Moose Lake (former Moose Lake Regional Treatment Center), Moose Lake, closed in 1988
 * Minnesota State Sanatorium for Consumptives, Walker, closed in 2008
 * Mount Sinai Hospital, Minneapolis, merged with Metropolitan Medical Center (Minneapolis) in 1990 and closed in 1991
 * Ripley Memorial Hospital, Minneapolis, closed before 2007
 * Rudolph Latto House, Hastings, closed in 1949
 * St. Ansgar Hospital, Moorhead, closed in 1990
 * St. Joseph's Hospital, St. Paul, closed in December 2020
 * St. Mary’s Hospital, Winstead, closed in 1989
 * Tanner's Hospital, Ely
 * Thompson–Fasbender House, Hastings, closed in 1953
 * White Earth Hospital, closed late 1940s

Psychiatric hospitals and centers

 * Anoka Metro Regional Treatment Center, Anoka
 * Fergus Falls Regional Treatment Center, Fergus Falls (closed in 2005)
 * Minnesota Security Hospital (formerly St. Peter State Hospital), St. Peter
 * Sanford Health Behavioral Health Center, Thief River Falls, PSY-HOSP-16

Health care systems
The following health care systems are located in Minnesota:


 * Allina Health
 * Alomere Health
 * Altru Health System
 * Avera Health
 * Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI)
 * CentraCare Health
 * Children's Minnesota
 * Essentia Health
 * Gillette Children's Specialty Healthcare
 * Gundersen Health System
 * HealthPartners
 * HealthEast Care System (defunct 2019 - now part of M Health Fairview)
 * Hennepin Healthcare
 * Indian Health Services
 * Lake Region Healthcare
 * Lakewood Health System
 * Mayo Clinic Health System
 * M Health Fairview
 * North Memorial Health
 * Riverwood Healthcare Center
 * Sanford Health
 * Shriners Children's
 * St. Francis Regional Medical Center (Minnesota)
 * Wilderness Health