A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Baca County, Colorado
Baca County sits at Colorado’s southeastern corner, where the High Plains stretch endlessly to the Kansas and Oklahoma borders and the nearest city of any size is Pueblo — more than two hours to the northwest. It is one of Colorado’s smallest, most remote, and most economically challenged counties, with a population of approximately 3,400 people that has declined by more than 11% since 2010. The rental market that exists here is not a market in the conventional investment sense — it is a small, community-embedded housing system serving the agricultural workforce, county government employees, healthcare workers, and retirees who form the backbone of southeastern Colorado’s rural economy. Understanding what this market is, and what it is not, is the starting point for any realistic assessment of landlord operations in Baca County.
The Baca County Economy and Who Rents Here
Agriculture has always been the foundation of Baca County’s economy, and it remains so today. Cattle ranching, dryland wheat farming, and sorghum production dominate the landscape, generating more than $130 million in agricultural output annually from a county of fewer than 3,500 people. Approximately 22% of the county’s employed workforce is engaged in agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting — one of the highest ratios of any Colorado county. The Comanche National Grasslands, managed by the U.S. Forest Service across 220,000 acres of the county, provides land stewardship employment and draws a small but consistent stream of wildlife-oriented visitors, particularly hunters and birders pursuing the region’s exceptional lesser prairie chicken and pronghorn populations.
Beyond agriculture, Baca County’s workforce is employed primarily in healthcare and social services, education, and county government. The Baca County Hospital in Prowers County’s neighboring Lamar serves as the regional medical center, while Springfield has a small medical clinic. The Baca County School District employs teachers, administrators, and support staff across the county’s widely dispersed schools. County government and the various special districts that provide water, fire protection, and other rural services round out the stable-employment sector. These institutional employees — nurses, teachers, county clerks, emergency responders — represent the most reliable tenant base in the county, and landlords who can attract and retain them will experience the most stable long-term performance.
What the Rental Market Actually Looks Like
The Baca County rental market is among the most rudimentary in Colorado. The county has approximately 1,657 housing units in total — a figure that includes owner-occupied homes, vacant properties, and the limited stock of rental units. True rental inventory is extremely thin: a small number of single-family homes and modest apartments in Springfield, a handful of units in Walsh and Campo, and occasional rural properties available on agricultural leases. Vacancy in the residential rental segment is functionally near zero — not because demand is strong in absolute terms, but because supply is so limited that the few available units are quickly absorbed by the small number of households seeking rental housing in the county each year.
Rents reflect the county’s income structure. With a median household income of approximately $46,000 and a cost-of-living index below the national average, rents in Baca County are among the lowest in Colorado. A modest two-bedroom house in Springfield might rent for $650–$850 per month; a simple one-bedroom apartment might go for $500–$650. These are not rents that support the acquisition of investment properties at anything approaching market-rate prices — and they do not need to, because the landlords who operate in this market are almost exclusively local residents who already own property and are renting it as a secondary income source, not investors who acquired at investor-market prices.
Colorado’s 2024 Laws in a Rural Context
Colorado’s sweeping 2024 landlord-tenant law reforms apply fully in Baca County, even though the policy debates that drove those reforms were almost entirely focused on the urban and resort county housing crises in Denver, Boulder, and the mountain communities. The just-cause eviction requirement of HB 24-1098 applies to non-exempt residential tenancies throughout the state, including in Springfield and the county’s other small communities. The habitability reforms of SB 24-094 — with their 24-to-72-hour response timelines for repairs — apply regardless of whether a contractor capable of performing the repair is readily available in a county as remote as Baca.
This last point deserves particular attention. Springfield is approximately 130 miles from Pueblo, 200 miles from Colorado Springs, and more than 200 miles from Denver. Local tradespeople — plumbers, HVAC technicians, electricians — exist but are limited in number and capacity. A landlord whose furnace fails on a January weekend in Baca County faces genuine logistical challenges in meeting the 24-hour life-safety response requirement under SB 24-094. The legal obligation does not diminish because the county is remote. Landlords operating in Baca County must maintain relationships with local trades, carry emergency repair reserves, and have contingency plans for situations where local capacity is insufficient. This is not a hypothetical concern — it is a routine operational challenge of owning rental property in southeastern Colorado’s most isolated county.
The Honest Investment Assessment
Baca County is not an investment market in the conventional sense, and it should not be approached as one. The cap rates that appear attractive on paper — low acquisition prices relative to rent levels — are offset by real operational challenges: limited contractor availability, a thin tenant pool with below-average incomes, declining population, limited liquidity on exit, and the management demands of remote rural property ownership. There is no property management industry in Baca County. Self-management or management through a trusted local agent is the only realistic option, and both require genuine local knowledge and presence.
The landlords who succeed in Baca County are invariably people with community roots. They know their tenants. They know the local tradespeople. They understand the agricultural calendar and the economic rhythms of a county where a drought year or a commodity price collapse has immediate and visible effects on every household in the community. They provide housing as a community service as much as a business activity, and they are compensated with stable, low-turnover tenancies from people who have few alternatives and who value a good landlord relationship accordingly. For the right person with the right local connection, Baca County can be a perfectly satisfactory landlord experience. For an outside investor expecting market-rate returns on a remotely managed portfolio, it will almost certainly disappoint.
Baca 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. Employer-provided agricultural housing may be exempt from just-cause eviction protections. High radon potential — testing recommended. Evictions filed in Baca County Court. Consult a licensed Colorado attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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