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Colorado Commercial Eviction Process (FED)

A step-by-step guide to executing commercial evictions in Colorado, focusing on Forcible Entry and Detainer (FED) actions and demand notices.

Melvin Prince
5 min čitanja
Verifikovano Apr 2026United States flag
Proces-iseljenjaKoloradoKomercijalnoKomercijalno obaveštenje o iseljenju u KoloraduZakoni Kolorada o isključenju iz komercijalnih objekata

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Demand Notice
3 Days
Self-Help Evictions
Highly Restricted
Court Action
FED Process

Colorado Commercial Eviction Process (FED)

While commercial tenants in Colorado lack the intense "For-Cause" eviction protections granted to residential renters in 2024, evicting a business entity remains a strict, highly procedural legal process.

Commercial evictions in Colorado are heavily governed by the Forcible Entry and Detainer (FED) statutes (C.R.S. §§ 13-40-101 et seq.).

[!CAUTION] No Self-Help Evictions: It is completely illegal for a Colorado commercial landlord to change the locks, cut off utilities, or seize the tenant's inventory without a formal court order, even if the tenant is severely behind on rent. Doing so exposes the landlord to massive liability.

Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are strictly configured under the official Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S. Title 13, Article 40).

Grounds for Commercial Eviction

Because the relationship is rooted in contract law, the commercial lease dictates what constitutes a "default" triggering an eviction. Standard commercial defaults include:

  1. Monetary Default: Failure to pay base rent, CAM charges, taxes, or late fees.
  2. Non-Monetary Default: Breaching specific lease covenants (e.g., operating an unapproved business type, failing to maintain minimum business hours in a retail center, or unauthorized subleasing).
  3. Holdover: Remaining in possession of the commercial space after the lease has formally expired.

The FED Eviction Timeline

If a commercial tenant breaches the lease, a landlord must meticulously follow these steps:

1. The Notice to Quit / Demand for Compliance

Before filing a lawsuit, the landlord must formally notify the tenant of the breach. Under standard Colorado FED statutes, this is typically a 3-Day Demand for Compliance or Right to Possession (giving the tenant 3 days to pay the rent or fix the issue before they must vacate). Crucially, if the written commercial lease specifically states a longer notice period (e.g., a "10-day notice to cure"), the court will require the landlord to honor the longer timeframe stated in the contract.

2. Filing the FED Complaint

If the tenant does not cure the default or vacate the premises within the notice period, the landlord files a Complaint for Forcible Entry and Detainer (alongside a copy of the lease and the demand notice) with the appropriate County or District Court.

3. Summons and Answer

The court issues a Summons, scheduling a return date (often 7 to 14 days later). The tenant must be formally served with the Summons and Complaint. The commercial tenant then has a small window to file a formal "Answer" outlining their defense. If they fail to file an Answer, the landlord can request a default judgment.

4. Possession Hearing

If the tenant disputes the eviction, a hearing is scheduled. In commercial cases, judges rely heavily on the written lease, communication records, and detailed financial ledgers. Because the stakes are high, commercial FED cases can occasionally become bogged down in complex discovery and counter-claims if the tenant argues the landlord breached the lease first.

5. Writ of Restitution

If the landlord wins the case, the judge issues a Writ of Restitution. Following a mandatory 48-hour waiting period, the landlord can coordinate with the local county sheriff to physically execute the eviction and restore possession of the premises to the landlord.


Centralize Your Default Documentation

Losing a high-stakes commercial FED action because of a lost ledger or a technically flawed Notice to Quit is devastating. Landager automatically tracks incoming rent and CAM payments, creating the exact, time-stamped financial ledgers your attorney needs to win a commercial eviction swiftly.


How Landager Helps

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

Back to Colorado Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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