A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Archuleta County, Colorado
Archuleta County presents one of the most unusual and instructive housing market dynamics in Colorado. On paper, it should be a landlord’s paradise: year-round demand for housing from a growing population, near-zero vacancy in the long-term rental segment, and a remote location that insulates the market from metro-area supply surges. In practice, the county’s housing market is deeply dysfunctional for most of its residents — not because of bad landlords, but because of structural forces that have converted a large share of the housing stock into vacation rentals and second homes, leaving the workforce that keeps Pagosa Springs operating scrambling for whatever long-term housing remains. Understanding this dynamic is the starting point for any landlord considering investing in Archuleta County.
The Pagosa Springs Housing Paradox
Archuleta County has an estimated 14,000 year-round residents, but on any given day during the peak tourism season, a quarter or more of the county’s residential units are vacant — sitting empty between short-term rental bookings or waiting for second-home owners to arrive for their seasonal visits. The county does not have a housing shortage in terms of total unit count. It has a profound shortage of housing that is available to the year-round workforce at prices they can afford. Estimates suggest that vacation rental conversions alone have removed approximately 10% of the county’s once-available residential housing stock from the long-term rental pool. The result is a market where teachers, nurses, police officers, firefighters, grocery store clerks, and restaurant workers either commute long distances from more affordable communities, live in overcrowded conditions, or depend on employer-provided housing — if their employer can provide it at all.
For long-term residential landlords, this dynamic creates a market where vacancy is essentially nonexistent. A well-maintained, reasonably priced long-term rental in Pagosa Springs will rarely sit empty between tenancies, and a landlord who treats workforce tenants fairly and maintains the property responsibly can build a stable, low-turnover portfolio that generates consistent returns year after year. The scarcity of long-term rental supply is the long-term landlord’s most durable competitive advantage in this market.
Short-Term vs. Long-Term: The Decision Every Archuleta County Investor Faces
Every landlord acquiring residential property in Archuleta County faces a fundamental strategic choice: operate as a long-term residential landlord serving the local workforce, or enter the short-term vacation rental market serving the tourists who come for Wolf Creek Ski Area, the hot springs, and the San Juan Mountains. This decision has legal, financial, and ethical dimensions that deserve honest analysis.
The STR market in Pagosa Springs is well-established, with over 1,500 vacation rental listings and average nightly rates that can generate significant gross revenue for properties with strong amenities and good locations. Wolf Creek Ski Area — known for some of the most reliable snowfall in Colorado — drives strong winter booking demand. The springs, the national forest, and the regional outdoor recreation economy support year-round visitation. An investor who acquires the right property in the right location and manages it well can generate returns from STR that substantially exceed what long-term residential renting would produce.
However, the STR path in Pagosa Springs comes with real complications. Within town limits, the STR license cap means that new licenses may not be available at all in capped residential zones. The two-year ownership requirement before applying for an STR permit adds a waiting period that affects acquisition financing. Regulations have been evolving rapidly — the town council has demonstrated a clear willingness to tighten STR rules in response to workforce housing pressure — and the regulatory environment a buyer underwrites today may be materially different in three to five years. State-level legislation targeting STR taxation has been introduced and debated in recent Colorado legislative sessions, and Archuleta County is actively considering increasing its lodgers’ tax significantly.
The Workforce Rental Opportunity
Against the complexity and regulatory uncertainty of the STR market, the case for long-term workforce residential renting in Archuleta County deserves serious consideration. The county’s 2024 Housing Needs Assessment identified a large and persistent gap between what the workforce earns and what housing costs in the market. Households earning between 60% and 100% of Area Median Income — which in Archuleta County covers a significant portion of government, healthcare, education, and skilled trades workers — have the most limited housing options and represent the most reliable long-term tenant base. These are people with stable employment, strong community ties, and a strong incentive to maintain their tenancy. A landlord who can provide a well-maintained three-bedroom house or a clean two-bedroom apartment at a rent that is genuinely affordable to this workforce will face essentially no vacancy problem in this market.
The financial arithmetic of long-term renting in Archuleta County requires realistic expectations. Rents that workforce tenants can actually afford — which the county defines as no more than 30% of gross income for a household earning 80% AMI — may not support the acquisition costs of market-rate housing in Pagosa Springs, where average single-family home prices have been running near $600,000. The math works best for investors who acquire at below-market prices, who benefit from value-add improvements, or who access subsidized financing through programs like USDA Rural Development loans or the Colorado Housing Finance Authority’s rural lending programs. It also works for existing local property owners who acquired before the recent price run-up and who are looking to convert underutilized properties to rental use.
Wildfire Risk and Operational Realities
Archuleta County sits within one of Colorado’s high wildfire risk zones. The San Juan Mountains and the surrounding national forest create both the scenic beauty that drives tourism and the fire risk that has become an increasingly significant operational concern for property owners throughout southwest Colorado. Landlords must ensure adequate insurance coverage that specifically addresses wildfire risk — a requirement that has become more challenging and more expensive as several major insurers have reduced or eliminated their Colorado mountain market exposure. State fire safety regulations applicable to STR properties have been strengthened under SB23-166, and it is reasonable to expect continued regulatory attention to wildfire preparedness as a condition of property operation in this area.
The habitability implications of high-altitude mountain living are also operationally significant for long-term landlords. At 7,126 feet elevation, Pagosa Springs experiences genuine winter weather, and heating system failures during cold snaps are legitimate life-safety emergencies under Colorado’s 2024 habitability framework. Landlords must have reliable HVAC contractor relationships capable of emergency response — which in a remote mountain community requires advance planning and relationship-building, not just a Google search at midnight on a January weekend.
Archuleta 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. STR operators in Town of Pagosa Springs must hold a Vacation Rental License; unincorporated county requires a county STR permit. Wildfire risk disclosure and fire safety compliance strongly recommended. Evictions filed in Archuleta County Court. Consult a licensed Colorado attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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