United States / Colorado
Growing mountain-state rental market with evolving tenant protections, recent rent stabilization legislation, and altitude-specific property concerns.
Regulatory Framework
Colorado landlord-tenant law is governed by C.R.S. Title 38, Article 12. Colorado has shifted significantly toward tenant protection in recent years. The state now limits late fees to the greater of $50 or 5% of monthly rent, requires landlords to provide 21 days before initiating eviction for non-payment, and limits security deposits to two months' rent. Colorado has not enacted statewide rent control but allows local jurisdictions to explore rent stabilization measures following the repeal of the 1981 preemption in 2023.
Key Rules at a Glance
Built for Colorado
Colorado's landlord-tenant laws have changed rapidly since 2022. Revun stays current with legislative changes and updates notice templates, fee calculations, and disclosure requirements automatically.
Colorado's late fee caps and extended notice periods require precise tracking. Revun enforces the greater-of-$50-or-5% late fee rule and manages the 21-day non-payment notice timeline.
Colorado properties face unique maintenance challenges: freeze-thaw pipe damage, wildfire mitigation, and high-altitude HVAC demands. Revun includes seasonal maintenance workflows specific to mountain-state properties.
Colorado portfolios span the Denver metro, Colorado Springs, and mountain resort towns with very different rental dynamics. Revun adapts to each submarket's seasonality and tenant profiles.
Coverage
Revun handles Colorado Revised Statutes (Title 38, Article 12) compliance so you can focus on your portfolio.