Just cause eviction rules in Denver County, CO β sometimes called tenant protection or "for cause" eviction ordinances β list the specific legal reasons a landlord can end a tenancy.
Denver follows Colorado HB 24-1098 just-cause eviction law (effective April 2024). Landlords must state a permitted cause for non-renewal or eviction of residential tenants who have lived in the unit more than 12 months.
Colorado HB 24-1098, which applies statewide including Denver, requires landlords to have just cause to terminate or refuse to renew a residential tenancy once the tenant has occupied the unit more than 12 months or the initial lease term has expired. Permitted for-cause reasons include nonpayment, material lease violation, criminal activity, and no-fault reasons such as owner move-in, substantial repairs, demolition, withdrawal from rental market, or sale with a buyer intending to occupy. No-fault terminations require 90 days notice and relocation assistance equal to 2 months rent. Self-help evictions (lockouts, utility shutoffs) violate C.R.S. Β§38-12-510 β tenant recovers 3 months rent or actual damages plus attorney fees. Denver County Court hears FED (forcible entry and detainer) cases.
No-cause termination of protected tenant: case dismissed. Self-help eviction: tenant recovers greater of actual damages or 3 months rent plus fees. Missing relocation assistance: civil damages plus court costs.
Denver County, CO
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Denver County, CO
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Denver County, CO
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Denver County, CO
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Denver County, CO
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Denver County, CO
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See how Denver County's just cause eviction rules stack up against other locations.
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