There is a place in Minneapolis where the smell of slow-roasted pork mingles with cardamom-spiced chai, where cumbia drifts past a vendor selling handmade Somali jewelry, and where you can eat your way around the world without ever stepping outside into a Minnesota winter. That place is Midtown Global Market, and it is one of the most genuinely wonderful spots in the entire Twin Cities.
Tucked inside the historic Midtown Exchange building on East Lake Street in the Midtown Phillips neighborhood, the market occupies the ground floor of what was once the mighty Sears, Roebuck and Company regional headquarters — a building so grand it still commands the skyline with its clock tower. Today, that same space hums with a different kind of commerce: one rooted in community, culture, and extraordinary food.
Walking through the main entrance, you are immediately struck by the scale of it. The ceilings soar, the light pours in through tall windows, and the whole place feels alive in a way that a typical food hall simply does not. This is not a curated, Instagram-optimized concept. It is a working, breathing marketplace that has served Minneapolis’s diverse Midtown community for nearly two decades, and that authenticity is exactly what makes it so compelling.
The vendor lineup reads like a passport. Holy Land Deli has been a local institution for years, and their shawarma and falafel are worth a special trip on their own. Safari Express serves Somali and East African dishes — the sambusas alone will change your afternoon. Manny’s Tortas brings serious Mexican street food energy, while La Loma Tamales draws loyal regulars who swear there is nothing better in the city. If you have a sweet tooth, stop by one of the dessert vendors for churros or a slice of tres leches cake that will make you want to sit down and reconsider your life choices in the best possible way.
Beyond the food, the market hosts a robust calendar of live music, cultural events, and community gatherings throughout the year. On weekends especially, you might catch a Latin jazz ensemble setting up near the central seating area, or find a local artisan pop-up selling hand-dyed textiles and ceramics. The energy on a busy Saturday afternoon is genuinely electric.
Parking is available in the adjacent ramp, and the market is also easily accessible via the Metro Green Line light rail — the Lake Street/Midtown station puts you right at the door. Plan to arrive hungry and with a bit of time to wander. Grab a stool, order from two or three vendors, share everything, and let the afternoon unfold at its own pace.
Midtown Global Market is not a tourist attraction in the polished, packaged sense. It is a living cross-section of what Minneapolis actually is — a city shaped by wave after wave of communities who arrived here and made something remarkable. Come for the food. Stay for the feeling that this city is something genuinely special.