Adams County's Animal Control Code does not regulate beekeeping, and Colorado has no statewide hive registration. Whether you may keep hives depends on your zone district (agricultural zones are permissive) and any city or HOA rules.
The Adams County Animal Control Code covers pet animals, not bees, so it sets no county beekeeping rule. Colorado once inspected hives under the Colorado Bee and Bee Products Act, but funding was eliminated in 1990 and there is now no state apiarist or mandatory registration. As a result, hive placement in unincorporated Adams County is governed by the county's land-use zoning (beekeeping fits agricultural uses on ag-zoned parcels) plus any HOA covenants. Inside city limits, the municipality's ordinances apply. Confirm your parcel's zone with Adams County Community & Economic Development before installing hives.
No specific county apiary penalty. Enforcement, if any, comes through zoning/nuisance rules or HOA covenants. Nuisance or aggressive-swarm complaints may be handled as a general nuisance.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Adams County, CO
Adams County does not prohibit residential backyard composting. There is no county permit for a home compost pile in unincorporated areas, but a poorly kept ...
Adams County, CO
Adams County has no countywide ordinance banning or specifically regulating artificial turf on private residential yards in unincorporated areas. Homeowners ...
Adams County, CO
Adams County does not prohibit or mandate native plants for private residential yards. County landscape standards encourage preserving existing valuable vege...
Adams County, CO
Colorado law lets Adams County residents collect rooftop rainwater in up to two rain barrels with a combined capacity of 110 gallons. It is limited to single...
Adams County, CO
There is no single county watering rule; limits are set by your water provider. In the South Adams County Water and Sanitation District (Commerce City and vi...
Adams County, CO
Under the Colorado Noxious Weed Act, every landowner in Adams County must manage designated noxious weeds. The county's 1997 Noxious Weed Enforcement Policy ...
See how Adams County's beekeeping rules stack up against other locations.
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