Michael Klinski
Michael Klinski
investigative reporter
michael.klinski@sdnewswatch.org

No.

South Dakota is one of 34 states and territories that have a minimum wage higher than the federal rate. 

The state’s minimum wage of $11.50 an hour increased from $11.30 on Jan. 1, 2025, compared to the federal minimum wage of $7.25. It had not been changed since 2009. 

That sets South Dakota apart from several regional states. North Dakota, Wyoming and Iowa all have minimum wages set to the federal rate. Only Nebraska ($13.50) has a rate higher than South Dakota. Minnesota’s is $11.13 as of June 2025.

South Dakota’s minimum wage changes annually, increasing at the same rate as the cost of living set by the Consumer Price Index. 

The federal rate is lower than the poverty level of $15,650 a year, set by the Department of Health and Human Services guidelines. A worker earning the federal minimum makes $15,080. 

This fact brief responds to conversations such as this one.


Sources

National Conference of State Legislatures, State minimum wages summary

KELO-TV, How South Dakota’s minimum wage increase stacks up

South Dakota Department of Labor, South Dakota Minimum Wage

U.S. Department of Labor, State minimum wage laws

Economic Policy Institute, The federal minimum wage is officially a poverty wage in 2025


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This story was produced by South Dakota News Watch, an independent, nonprofit organization. Read more and donate at sdnewswatch.org and sign up for an email story summary on most weekdays that links to the full version. Contact Michael Klinski at michael.klinski@sdnewswatch.org.