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Colorado Landlord-Tenant Laws & Guide (2024-2025 Updates)

A complete guide to Colorado landlord-tenant laws, covering new ''for-cause'' eviction rules, security deposit caps, rent increases, and late fee limits.

Melvin Prince
4 min read
Verified Apr 2026United States flag
OverviewColoradoResidentialcolorado landlord tenant actcolorado rights of renters

Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.Information last verified: April 2026.

Governing Law
C.R.S. Title 38, Article 12
Rent Control
Explicitly Banned
Deposit Cap
No standard cap

Colorado Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview

Colorado's residential rental market has undergone a dramatic legislative transformation in recent years. Sweeping updates in 2024 and 2025 significantly increased tenant protections, most notably enacting "For-Cause" eviction policies, strict caps on late fees, and brand new limits on security deposits effective in 2026.

Whether you manage a single condo in Denver or a multi-family complex in Colorado Springs, strict adherence to these new compliance standards is mandatory.

[!CAUTION] Recent Legislative Changes: Colorado passed HB 24-1098 (For-Cause Evictions) in 2024 and HB 25-1249 (Security Deposit Protections, effective Jan 1, 2026). Landlords must update their standard lease agreements to comply with these new statewide mandates.

Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are strictly configured under the official Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S. Title 38, Article 12).

1. Security Deposits

Colorado limits both the amount a landlord can charge for a deposit and how it is returned:

  • Deposit Limits: Under new laws effective January 1, 2026, landlords cannot charge more than one month’s rent for a security deposit. Tenants are also legally permitted to pay deposits in installments over a six-month period.
  • Deductions: Pre-existing damages and normal wear-and-tear (including aging carpet) cannot be deducted. Landlords must provide extensive photographic documentation within 14 days if deductions are made.
  • Return Timeline: Deposits must be returned within 30 days (or up to 60 days if explicitly stated in the lease).

2. The "For-Cause" Eviction Process

In 2024, Colorado eliminated most "no-fault" evictions or non-renewals. A landlord must have a legally defined "cause" (e.g., unpaid rent, material lease violation, substantial property damage, or the landlord intending to sell/occupy the property) to legally evict or refuse to renew a tenant's lease.

  • Non-Payment: Tenants can halt the eviction process completely if they pay the full outstanding rent balance before the eviction court judgment is finalized.
  • Notices: Landlords must physically serve demands for compliance. For non-renewals based on exempt causes, 90-day notices are often required.

3. Rent Increases and Late Fees

Colorado generally prohibits local municipalities from enacting rent control, meaning base rent increases are not capped unless during a declared housing disaster.

  • Increase Limits: Landlords may only increase the rent once in any 12-month period, regardless of lease structure.
  • Late Fees: Highly regulated. Landlords must provide a 7-day grace period. Late fees cannot exceed $50 or 5% of the past-due balance, whichever is greater, and interest cannot be charged on late fees.

| Read about Late Fees

4. Warranty of Habitability

The updated Warranty of Habitability (amended in 2024 via SB 24-094) drastically shortens the timeline for landlords to address critical repairs (often 72 hours for life/safety issues). Tenants have enhanced rights, including "repair and deduct" remedies under specific circumstances if the landlord fails to act.


Stay Compliant in Colorado

With rapid changes to eviction notices and mandatory deposit installments, tracking Colorado leases manually is a high-risk liability. Landager automatically handles compliant late fee calculations (respecting the 7-day grace period and 5% cap) and securely stores maintenance records.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, required compliance items, and accounting records - making it easy to stay compliant with Colorado regulations.

Sources & Official References

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