A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Conejos County, Colorado
Conejos County is one of the most culturally distinctive and economically challenging counties in Colorado — a place where the landscape, the language, the history, and the economics all point in the same direction: this is a deeply rooted Hispano community with centuries of settlement history, very limited economic resources, and a rental market that exists almost entirely to serve the needs of people whose connection to this land predates the state of Colorado itself. Understanding Conejos County as a landlord requires understanding it first as a community — a community of remarkable cultural depth and resilience that faces genuine economic hardship and deserves landlords who operate with both legal compliance and genuine respect for the people and traditions they serve.
The Hispano Heritage of Conejos County
Conejos County was settled by Hispano families whose ancestors came north from New Mexico in the mid-19th century, following patterns of settlement that had been ongoing in the Rio Grande corridor for generations before the American acquisition of the territory. The county’s communities — Antonito, Manassa, La Jara, Romeo, Sanford, and the dozens of tiny plazas and villages scattered across the valley floor — have strong roots in the acequia irrigation tradition, the Catholic faith, and the extended family structures that have sustained life in this high-altitude desert landscape for generations. The Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish in the unincorporated community of Conejos, established in 1854, is one of the oldest continuously operating Catholic parishes in Colorado. The county’s median age of 40.6 years reflects a community that has retained some of its younger population, though outmigration to Alamosa, Pueblo, and Denver remains a persistent force shaping the county’s demographics.
The county’s racial and ethnic composition — with over 60% of residents identifying as Hispanic or Latino — has direct practical implications for landlords operating here. Colorado law requires that eviction notices be served in the tenant’s primary language when known to the landlord. In Conejos County, this means that Spanish-language notices are required for a large majority of tenancies. Landlords who do not have the ability to prepare accurate Spanish-language legal notices should establish a relationship with a translator or use a template prepared by a Colorado attorney, rather than attempting to produce notices themselves. An eviction notice that is served in the wrong language, or that contains errors in translation, may be challenged as legally defective, potentially delaying the eviction proceeding and exposing the landlord to additional costs.
The Economics of Renting in Antonito
The economic data for Conejos County and Antonito in particular paints a picture of genuine hardship. The median household income for renter households in Antonito is approximately $25,104 — less than half the state median for renters. The child poverty rate in the county exceeds 23%. Average home values in Antonito run approximately $63,300 — roughly 81% below the Colorado state average. The unemployment rate in Antonito has historically run in the 15–16% range, reflecting the limited employment base of a county whose primary economic activities are agriculture, county and school district government, and the seasonal tourism generated by the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad.
For landlords, these numbers define the practical parameters of the rental relationship. A tenant earning the median renter household income of $25,104 per year can afford approximately $628 per month at the 30% rent-to-income threshold — and the data confirms that rents in Antonito are already running close to that level. This means that rent increases, even modest ones, push a meaningful portion of the tenant population into housing cost burden territory where they are spending more than 30% of their income on rent. Landlords who raise rents aggressively in this environment will find that tenants cannot comply and that eviction becomes the outcome — at which point the landlord faces the challenge of finding replacement tenants from an already very thin pool of qualified applicants. The economics of this market strongly favor patient, relationship-oriented landlords who prioritize tenant retention over maximum rent extraction.
The Cumbres & Toltec and Seasonal Tourism
The Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad is Conejos County’s most significant tourism asset and one of the most authentic preserved railroad experiences in the United States. The 64-mile narrow-gauge steam railroad operates between Antonito, Colorado and Chama, New Mexico from late May through October, crossing the spectacular 10,015-foot Cumbres Pass through terrain accessible by no other means of ground transportation. The railroad is jointly owned by the states of Colorado and New Mexico and is managed by a non-profit foundation, with annual ridership in the range of 40,000–50,000 passengers. For landlords in Antonito, the railroad’s operating season generates a modest but real demand for short-term lodging and vacation rentals from tourists who want to base themselves in Antonito for multi-day railroad excursions. This seasonal demand is not sufficient to support a professional STR operation on its own, but for property owners who want to supplement long-term rental income with seasonal short-term use, the railroad provides a genuine anchor demand driver during the summer and fall months.
Conejos County landlord-tenant matters are governed by CRS Title 38, Article 12 and CRS Title 13, Article 40. Nonpayment notice: 10 days (3 days for exempt agreements). Lease violation: 10 days to cure or quit. No-fault non-renewal: 90 days with qualifying reason. Late fee grace period: 7 days; maximum fee: $50 or 5% of past-due rent. Security deposit return: 30 days (60 days if agreed). No rent control statewide. Bilingual Spanish-English eviction notices required when tenant’s primary language is known. No county-level STR licensing — verify with Town of Antonito for local requirements. Evictions filed in Conejos County Court. Consult a licensed Colorado attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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