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🪧 Sign Regulations/Political Signs

Political Signs: Boulder vs Longmont

How do political signs rules compare between Boulder, CO and Longmont, CO?

Boulder and Longmont have similar restriction levels.

Boulder, CO

Boulder County

Few Restrictions

Boulder allows political signs on private property with size limits. Signs in public rights-of-way are typically prohibited. First Amendment protections apply. Removal required within a set period after elections.

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Longmont, CO

Boulder County

Few Restrictions

Longmont allows political election signs on private property only, with permission of the owner. They cannot be placed in the public right-of-way, attached to utility poles, street signs, traffic signals, hydrants, trees or fences, and must not obstruct driver sightlines. Sign rules are codified in LMC Chapter 15.06, and HOAs are further preempted by Colorado's CCIOA political-sign statute (C.R.S. 38-33.3-106.5).

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Key Facts Comparison

FactBoulderLongmont
Private PropertyAllowed with size limits-
Right-of-WayProhibitedProhibited — private property only
Post-ElectionRemove within 7 to 30 days-
TopicPolitical Signs-
Code Section-LMC Chapter 15.06 (Signs)
Attachment Ban-No utility poles, traffic signs, hydrants, trees or fences
HOA Display Window (State)-45 days before election to 7 days after (C.R.S. 38-33.3-106.5)
Max HOA Size (State)-Lesser of local ordinance or 36" x 48"
Civil Penalty-$100 / $200 / $500 (1st / 2nd / 3rd violation)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Boulder FAQ

Can I put a political sign in my yard?

Yes. Political signs on private property are protected by the First Amendment. Size limits apply, typically 6 to 32 square feet depending on your zone.

Can my HOA ban political signs?

Many states have laws limiting HOA ability to ban political signs. Check state law — most allow reasonable political signage during election seasons even in HOA communities.

Longmont FAQ

Can I put a political sign in the strip between the sidewalk and street in Longmont?

No. That strip is public right-of-way. Per LMC Chapter 15.06 and Longmont Code Enforcement guidance, political election signs must be placed on private property only — not in the public right-of-way, on utility poles, traffic signs, hydrants, trees, or fences.

Can my HOA stop me from displaying a political sign in Longmont?

Only within narrow limits. Under Colorado's CCIOA political-sign statute (C.R.S. 38-33.3-106.5), HOAs cannot ban political signs on your property, but may restrict the display window to between 45 days before and 7 days after an election and may cap size at the lesser of any applicable city ordinance or 36" x 48".

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