Colorado Rent Late Fees Laws (2024/2025)
Review Colorado's strict limitations on rent late fees, including the mandatory 7-day grace period, the $50 or 5% cap, and illegal fee structures.
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.
Colorado Late Fee Laws
Colorado enforces some of the strictest regulations nationwide regarding when and how much a landlord can penalize a residential tenant for paying rent late.
Following sweeping changes passed in 2021 (S.B. 173) that remain actively enforced today, landlords must strictly adhere to both minimum grace periods and maximum financial caps.
[!CAUTION] Eviction Warning: In Colorado, landlords are strictly prohibited from terminating a tenancy or filing an eviction lawsuit (unlawful detainer) solely based on a tenant's failure to pay a late fee. Evictions must be based on unpaid rent.
Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are strictly configured under the official Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S. § 38-12-105).
The Mandatory 7-Day Grace Period
In Colorado, a landlord cannot legally assess or charge a late fee until a rent payment is late by at least seven (7) full calendar days.
For example, if rent is uniformly due on the 1st of the month, a tenant has through the 8th to submit payment. If the payment arrives on the 9th, only then can a late fee be legally applied.
The Financial Cap: $50 or 5%
Colorado sets a stringent statutory maximum on the amount of a late fee. A residential late fee cannot exceed:
- A flat fee of $50, OR
- 5% of the past due rent amount. (Whichever of those two sums is greater).
A landlord is prohibited from stacking late fees. The fee cannot be charged more than once for the same late payment unless the combined total still remains underneath the 5% / $50 ceiling.
Illegal Late Fee Practices
The following actions regarding late fees are explicitly illegal in Colorado:
- Charging Interest: A landlord cannot charge accrued interest on an unpaid late fee.
- Hidden Fees: Any applied late fee must be explicitly detailed and disclosed within the written lease agreement prior to signing.
- Application of Payments: A landlord cannot apply a tenant's standard rent payment toward an outstanding late fee balance first. Rent payments must be applied to rent.
- Subsidy Late Fees: Landlords are strictly prohibited from charging late fees on the portion of rent owed by a government or non-profit housing subsidy provider (like Section 8 components).
- Notice Requirements: A landlord must provide written notice of a late fee within 180 days after the rent payment initially became due; otherwise, the right to collect that fee is forfeited.
If a Colorado landlord violates these extremely precise late fee rules and fails to cure the violation within 7 days of receiving a notice from the tenant, the landlord can be forced to pay a $50 initial violation penalty, plus up to $1,000 per subsequent violation, plus the tenant's attorney's fees.
Automatically Apply Legal Late Fees
Never risk accidentally charging a late fee on day 5 and facing a $1,000 fine. Landager automatically tracks the exact Colorado 7-day grace period for every property and flawlessly calculates the 5% state-mandated maximum, so your ledgers are always mathematically perfect and legally compliant.
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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