Manitobaite, ideally Na16 Mn2+25 Al8 (PO4)30, is a new mineral species from Cross Lake, Manitoba, Canada. It occurs as large crystals or cleavage masses intergrown with other phosphate minerals in a phosphate pod in the intermediate and core zones of pegmatite #22 on the southeastern shoreline of a small unnamed island in Cross Lake, Manitoba, about 5 km north–northwest of the Cross Lake settlement, longitude 54° 41′ N, latitude 97° 49′ W. Associated minerals are fluorapatite, chlorapatite, bobfergusonite, eosphorite, dickinsonite, fillowite, triploidite, goyazite, perloffite, beusite, triplite, as well as quartz, K-feldspar, muscovite, schorl, beryl, spessartine, gahnite and (Nb,Ta,Sn) oxides. Manitobaite is opaque in large crystals (up to 4 cm), and transparent to translucent in small (<1 mm) grains. Color varies from green to brown, with a colorless to very pale green or very pale greenish brown streak and a vitreous to resinous luster; manitobaite does not fluoresce under ultraviolet light. The cleavage is perfect on {010}, there is no parting, the tenacity is brittle, and the fracture is hackly. The following properties were measured on the green variety of manitobaite. The measured and calculated densities are 3.621(6) and 3.628 g cm−3, respectively. Manitobaite is biaxial negative with α 1.682, β 1.691, γ 1.697 (all ±0.001), with X ∧