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Clinics listed below are hosted by Colorado Legal Services (CLS), or have CLS involvement.
Call, walk-in (during walk-in hours only), or complete an online application by clicking here. Find your office here, and/or find legal information by clicking here.
We are required by funders to ask you about the below to figure out whether you're eligible for services.
You can complete this form online, email it to yourself or save it to your local computer and submit it to the court to ask them to waive your filing fees when filing a case or responding to a filed case in court.
Form to Waive Filing Fee
Instructions from CO Courts
Walk through a Colorado county courthouse (English, Espanol) to get more familiar with:
Services available to help you navigate the county court system
Court staff and personnel
Court protocols and procedures
General layout of courtrooms and courts in general
When a landlord wins an eviction case in court, the court will enter a judgment for possession in the landlord’s favor.
A judgment for possession, also known as an “eviction” or an “eviction judgment,” is an order from the court stating that the landlord is entitled to possession of the premises.
Watch this video about how to talk with your landlord. Presented by The Justice Center in Colorado Springs.
What is a lockout?
A lockout is when the landlord has changed the locks or is denying you access to your rental unit without an eviction order from the Court.
What is a Security Deposit?
A security deposit is money that a tenant pays to their landlord until they move out. It is meant to guarantee that all rent, bills, and damages are paid before the renter moves out. A security deposit may be called other names such as a damage deposit or a pet deposit, but they are all the same thing under the law: a security deposit.
By law, every residential lease in Colorado includes a “Warranty of Habitability”. The Warranty of Habitability requires landlords to maintain living spaces they rent out up to some basic standards. The law requires that rental units are to be general safe and “fit for human habitation.”
What are the basic requirements under the Warrant of Habitability?
Landlord Duties
Landlords are required to make sure that their properties have:
As long as you’re living in the same place, a landlord cannot raise your rent more than once a year, even if you pay on a month-to-month basis or if you don’t have a written lease.
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