RateOrchard
METRO DATA PROFILE · 2025

Financial and Investment Analysts salary in Minneapolis, Minnesota

Metro-level median, range, and employment from BLS Occupational Employment Statistics for the Minneapolis metropolitan area. Skills and task data from O*NET. State and national figures shown for context.

Adrian Serafin, founder and editor of RateOrchardBy Adrian SerafinFounderUpdated June 12, 2026
Median annual$103,350
Mean annual$109,550
Range (10th to 90th)$65,640 to $165,510
Minneapolis, Minnesota employment6,380
State vs national-0.7% vs national
Editorial commentary

What the numbers say

About 5,520 Financial and Investment Analysts worked in the Minneapolis metro in 2024. That makes it one of the larger concentrations of the role in the Midwest, anchored by the insurance, banking, and asset management firms that cluster in the Twin Cities.

The median annual wage was $103,200, just $400 above the Minnesota median of $102,800 and about $2,000 above the national figure of $101,220. Those are narrow gaps. Minneapolis essentially tracks the state and the country on this one, which is worth noting for a metro with a financial services industry of this scale.

The spread between top and bottom earners is where the more interesting story sits. The 10th percentile came in at $67,420 and the 90th at $165,000. Top earners made about 2.4 times what entry-level analysts made. That kind of range usually reflects real differences in seniority, specialization, and which firm someone works for rather than geography alone. An analyst two years out of school and one fifteen years in are both counted in that 5,520.

The average wage of $109,740 ran about $6,500 above the median. That tells us a smaller group of higher-paid analysts pulls the average up, though not by a dramatic amount compared to some other metros we see in finance-heavy markets. The national mean of $116,330 sits above the Minneapolis mean, suggesting the highest-earning analysts nationally are concentrated elsewhere, likely in New York and a few coastal markets.

Methodology. Drafted with AI assistance using Anthropic Claude, reviewed by Adrian Serafin against BLS Metro OES and O*NET source data. No fact appears that does not exist in the cited public datasets.

Salary distribution

Where Minneapolis financial and investment analysts fall on the wage curve.

Annual wage distribution

Shaded band = interquartile range (where most full-time workers fall)

10TH$65,64025TH$79,030MEDIAN$103,35075TH$128,68090TH$165,510

The middle 50% of workers earn between $79,030 and $128,680, with a median of $103,350.

Typical entry

  • Education

    Bachelor's degree

  • Experience

    None

  • On-the-job training

    None

Top skills (O*NET)

Skill data from O*NET is not yet ingested for this occupation. We refresh this section when O*NET publishes a new release.

Common tasks (O*NET)

Task data from O*NET is not yet ingested for this occupation.

Sponsored

Build the skills employers list for Financial and Investment Analysts

Online courses from licensed providers. We may earn a commission when you enroll. The commission does not influence our rankings or wage data.

Explore courses

Frequently asked questions

What is the median salary for Financial and Investment Analysts in Minneapolis, Minnesota?
According to BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, the median annual wage for Financial and Investment Analysts in the Minneapolis metropolitan area is $103,350.
Does Minneapolis pay more than the Minnesota state average for Financial and Investment Analysts?
The Minneapolis metro median is +0.3% versus the Minnesota state median of $102,990.
How does Minneapolis compare to the national median for Financial and Investment Analysts?
The Minneapolis metro median is -0.7% versus the BLS national figure of $104,114.
What is the salary range for Financial and Investment Analysts in Minneapolis?
BLS reports the 10th-percentile annual wage at $65,640 and the 90th-percentile at $165,510 for the Minneapolis metro area.
What education is required for Financial and Investment Analysts?
BLS lists the typical entry-level education as Bachelor's degree. Many employers also weigh prior experience and credentials.
Disclaimer

Information on this page is for general educational purposes only. It is not career, financial, or tax advice. BLS metro estimates reflect the Minneapolis CBSA boundary for the reference year shown and may not match individual offers, employer-specific ranges, or current market conditions. Confirm with a licensed professional before making career or compensation decisions.