Colorado's general adverse possession period is 18 years of open, continuous, hostile possession under Colo. Rev. Stat. § 38-41-101. The period shrinks to 7 successive years where the claimant holds color of title in good faith and pays all taxes on the land (§ 38-41-108). Squatters are removed through eviction or trespass remedies.
Under Colo. Rev. Stat. § 38-41-101, an owner generally must bring an action to recover possession within eighteen years, the period an adverse possessor must hold the land to perfect a claim. Section 38-41-108 shortens this where the claimant has color of title made in good faith: "Every person in the actual possession of lands or tenements, under claim and color of title, made in good faith, who for seven successive years continues in such possession and also during said time pays all taxes legally assessed on such lands or tenements shall be held and adjudged to be the legal owner." Mere squatters without these elements have no possessory right; an owner removes them through the forcible entry and detainer process or a trespass/criminal complaint rather than self-help.
A squatter who has not satisfied the statutory adverse-possession elements is an unlawful occupant subject to removal through an eviction (FED) action under Title 13, Article 40, or trespass and criminal remedies. Owners generally may not use self-help lockouts; they must proceed through the courts. No statutory monetary penalty attaches to the adverse-possession claim itself.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Lakewood, CO
Lakewood addresses barking dogs under its nuisance and animal control ordinances. Persistent barking that disturbs neighbors constitutes a nuisance violation.
Lakewood, CO
Lakewood regulates noise under Title 9, Chapter 9.80 of the Municipal Code. Unreasonable noise that disturbs others is prohibited, with stricter enforcement ...
Lakewood, CO
Lakewood permits construction from 7 AM to 9 PM Monday through Saturday. Sunday and holiday construction in residential areas is restricted.
Lakewood, CO
Lakewood restricts RV and boat parking in residential areas. Recreational vehicles and boats must be stored on the owner's property, not on public streets fo...
Lakewood, CO
Lakewood restricts commercial vehicle parking in residential areas. Heavy commercial vehicles cannot be stored overnight in residential zones.
Lakewood, CO
Lakewood requires driveways to meet city standards. A permit is needed for new or modified driveways. Vehicles must not block sidewalks.
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