Colorado Commercial Rent Increases
Review Colorado's laws surrounding commercial rent increases, including market-rate escalators, NNN lease charges, and notice provisions.
法律免责声明
本内容仅供一般信息和教育目的。它不构成法律建议,不应作为法律建议依赖。法律法规经常变化——请务必核实当前法规并咨询您所在司法管辖区的持证律师,以获取针对您具体情况的建议。Landager 是一个物业管理平台,而非律师事务所。信息最后验证时间: April 2026.
Commercial Rent Increases in Colorado
Colorado law expressly forbids local municipalities from enacting rent control measures on housing and commercial real estate. As a result, there is absolutely no statutory cap on how much a commercial landlord can increase base rent in Colorado.
The frequency and severity of base rent increases, percentage rent escalations, and Common Area Maintenance (CAM) operating expenses are exclusively dictated by the free market and the negotiated commercial lease agreement.
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prohibiting rent control.
Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are strictly configured under general commercial contract law and C.R.S. § 38-12-301 prohibiting rent control.
Rent Increases During a Fixed-Term Lease
During an active commercial lease (e.g., a 5-year term), a landlord cannot unilaterally increase the base rent unless an "escalation clause" was expressly written into the initial contract.
Common Escalation Clauses
To preserve the profitability of commercial investments against inflation and rising property taxes, Colorado landlords rely heavily on built-in escalators:
- Fixed Annual Steps: A predetermined, static increase (e.g., "$25 sq. ft in Year 1, $26 sq. ft in Year 2") embedded directly into the rent payment schedule.
- CPI or Inflation Adjustments: Rent automatically adjusts annually in direct proportion to the regional or national Consumer Price Index (CPI), shielding the landlord from aggressive inflation.
- Percentage Rent: Common in shopping centers and retail pad sites, the commercial tenant pays a fixed base rent, plus a negotiated percentage of their gross retail sales above a specific designated threshold (the "breakpoint").
- CAM Reconciliation Add-Backs: In Triple Net (NNN) leases, the landlord estimates annual operating expenses (snow removal, landscaping, master insurance). At the end of the year, if actual expenses run higher than the estimate, the landlord reconciles the difference, requiring the tenant to pay the shortfall-which functions as a substantial variable rent increase.
Rent Increases for Month-to-Month Tenancies
If a commercial lease has entirely expired and legally transitioned into an informal month-to-month or "holdover" tenancy, the landlord holds the authority to increase the rent.
While Colorado residential law mandates a strict 60-day notice for rent increases on oral month-to-month tenancies, commercial landlords rely on the notice periods documented in their original (now expired) lease. If the lease was silent, standard practices often necessitate a minimum 10-day to 30-day written notice prior to the start of the next rental period before a rent escalation takes legal effect.
, holdover tenant clauses regularly stipulate an immediate, automatic 150% to 200% base rent premium if the tenant refuses to sign a renewal but fails to vacate the premises on the expiration date.
Never Miss a Scheduled Escalation
Manually calculating complex CPI adjustments or tracking 5% step-increases across a massive retail portfolio guarantees lost revenue. Landager automatically triggers scheduled commercial rent escalations directly from the lease abstract, ensuring every tenant is invoiced the exact, compliant amount on time.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, required compliance items, and accounting records - making it easy to stay compliant with Colorado regulations.
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