Lease Snipe

Colorado Deposit Interest Rules

no interest required

Colorado has no statewide requirement that landlords pay interest on security deposits (14 of 51 US jurisdictions do). Your lease may still promise interest — if it does, that promise is enforceable.

Educational information: generated from our Colorado law database (last updated 2024-01-01). Not legal advice.

How Colorado compares

14 of 51 US jurisdictions require landlords to pay interest on security deposits. Here is how Colorado compares with other states in our database.

StateDeposit Interest Rules
Coloradono interest required
Connecticutinterest required
Delawareno interest required
District of Columbiainterest required (deposits held 12+ months)
Floridano interest required

Frequently asked questions

Do landlords have to pay interest on security deposits in Colorado?
No statewide statute requires it in Colorado, though local ordinances or your lease can add the obligation. Maximum 2 months rent (SB23-184). Pet deposits limited to $300. Must be returned within 30 days (or up to 60 days if specified in lease). Willful retention results in treble damages plus attorney fees.
How large can the deposit itself be in Colorado?
Colorado generally allows at most 2 months' rent as a security deposit.
When do I get my security deposit back in Colorado?
Generally within 30–60 days after move-out.

Check Your Lease Against Colorado Law

Not sure whether your lease complies with Colorado law? Upload it and our analyzer flags problem clauses — deposit terms, entry rights, fees and prohibited provisions — using the same statute-backed database this page is generated from.

Analyze My Lease Free

Educational tool — not legal advice. First analysis is free, no signup required.

More Colorado lease law guides

Educational information generated from state statute data — not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in Colorado for your specific situation.