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Rental Property Rules in Colorado Springs, CO (2026)

3 verified rental property rules for Colorado Springs, Colorado, sourced directly from the municipal code and official government pages.

Verified from official government sources

Rent Control

Colorado Springs does not have rent control or rent stabilization ordinances. Colorado state law (C.R.S. 38-12-301) preempts local governments from enacting rent control measures, explicitly prohibiting any county or municipality from imposing controls on the amount of rent charged for private residential property. Landlords may set and increase rents at market rates without limitation, subject only to the terms of existing lease agreements. This statewide preemption means Colorado Springs cannot adopt rent control even if it wished to do so.

Colorado Springs Rent Control & Stabilization

Few Restrictions

Colo. Rev. Stat. tit. 38 (2023) (Property - Real and Personal)

38-12-301. Control of rents by counties and municipalities prohibited - legislative declaration. (1) The general assembly finds and declares that the imposition of rent control on private residential housing units is a matter of statewide concern; therefore, no county or municipality may enact any ordinance or resolution that would control rent on either private residential property or a privat...

Just Cause Eviction

Colorado Springs does not have a just-cause eviction ordinance. Landlords may terminate tenancies for any lawful reason with proper notice as provided under Colorado landlord-tenant law. For month-to-month tenancies, landlords must provide written notice as required by state statute (typically 21 days for tenancies of one month to six months, 28 days for tenancies of six months to one year, and 91 days for tenancies of one year or longer under recent Colorado legislation). Colorado does prohibit retaliatory evictions under C.R.S. 38-12-509.

Colorado Springs Just Cause Eviction Protections

Few Restrictions

Colo. HB 24-1098 (Cause Required to Evict Residential Tenant)

Bill Summary: With certain exceptions, the act prohibits a landlord from evicting a residential tenant unless the landlord has cause for eviction. Cause exists only when: A tenant or lessee is guilty of an unlawful detention of real property under certain circumstances described in existing law, as amended by the act; A tenant or lessee engages in conduct that creates a nuisance or disturbance ...

Rental Registration

Colorado Springs requires short-term rental properties to register with the city through a licensing process. Traditional long-term rental properties do not currently require a separate rental registration or licensing with the city. Short-term rentals (stays of fewer than 30 consecutive days) must obtain a Short-Term Rental license, pay applicable lodgers' and sales taxes, and comply with occupancy and parking standards. The city has been expanding short-term rental regulation to address neighborhood impacts.

Colorado Springs Rental Property Registration

Some Restrictions

Looking for El Paso County county-wide rules?

County ordinances apply to unincorporated areas and may supplement Colorado Springs city rules.

Rental Property Rules in El Paso County