Colorado Notice of No-Fault Eviction
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If a Landlord does not plan to renew a Colorado Residential Lease Agreement, the Landlord should provide the Tenant with a Notice of No-Fault Eviction at least 90 days before the Tenancy ends.
Document Last Modified: 11/5/2025
Document Features
State-Specific
Colorado Eviction Laws: No-Fault Eviction
As of April 2024, Colorado Landlords must comply with “just cause” requirements for non-renewal of a Lease Agreement. Cause to terminate a tenancy includes:
- Demolition of the rental property
- Conversion to a nonresidential property
- Conversion to a short-term rental property
- Substantial repairs
- Landlord use
- Sale of property
- Failure of Tenant to sign a new rental agreement with reasonable terms
- A history of two or more late rent payments
Landlords are exempt from just cause requirements if:
- The Landlord has Tenants who have lived in the rental for less than a year;
- The rental property is the Landlord’s primary residence; or
- The rental is employer-provided housing, a mobile home, or a short-term rental property.
If the Landlord is not exempt from just cause requirements and does not plan to renew the Lease Agreement, the Landlord must provide Tenants with a Notice of No-Fault Eviction at least 90 days before the Rental Agreement expires.
Download a copy of this Notice to ensure compliance with all Colorado Lease Laws.
Free Colorado court forms are also available at: Courts.state.co.us
Colorado Rental Forms and Templates
- Colorado Demand for Compliance: This form should be used any time a renter violates the Lease agreement. It can be used when a Tenant fails to pay rent or for other Lease violations. It’s a required first step in the eviction process.
- Colorado Official Notice to Quit: This form should be used if the Lease Agreement has expired or if the Landlord wants the Tenant to move out of the unit for other reasons. It’s a required step before filing for eviction.
- Colorado Instructions for Forcible Entry & Detainer: These instructions are a great resource for Landlords and make it as EZ as possible for Landlords to initiate eviction proceedings.
- Colorado Forcible Entry & Detainer Complaint: This printable complaint may be used to initiate eviction proceedings.
Pro Tip: This form can only be used after the Landlord has provided the Tenant with either a Demand for Compliance or a Notice to Quit and the Tenant has failed to comply with the notice.
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