A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Bent County, Colorado
Bent County is one of Colorado’s most historically layered and economically complex rural communities. Named for William Bent, the 19th-century fur trader whose adobe trading post on the Arkansas River anchored commerce across the Great Plains before Colorado statehood, the county carries a legacy that stretches from the Santa Fe Trail era through the Dust Bowl and into the present-day reality of a small, declining rural economy trying to sustain itself through agriculture and state correctional employment. For the residential landlord, Bent County presents a market that is simultaneously straightforward and demanding: the rental stock is small, vacancy is essentially nonexistent, and the tenants who need housing are deeply embedded in the local community. But rents are low, incomes are modest, and the operational challenges of remote rural property management are real.
The Two Pillars of Bent County’s Economy
Bent County’s economy rests on two foundations that could hardly be more different from each other: agriculture along the Arkansas River and the corrections industry. Understanding both is essential for anyone thinking about residential rental property in this market.
The agricultural economy of Bent County is built on irrigated farming in the Arkansas River valley and dryland ranching on the surrounding plains. Alfalfa, corn, wheat, and historically sugar beets have been the primary crops, supported by water from the Fort Lyon Canal — a 121-mile irrigation ditch that delivers Arkansas River water to farms across Otero, Bent, and Prowers counties. The agricultural sector is under significant structural pressure: water rights are increasingly being purchased by Colorado Springs Utilities under long-term agreements that compensate farmers for fallowing irrigated land, farm consolidation has reduced the number of agricultural jobs over decades, and commodity price volatility makes farm income unpredictable. Agricultural workers who remain in the county represent a tenant population with seasonal income patterns and, in many cases, housing needs that intersect with the county’s farm labor housing stock managed by the Bent County Housing Authority.
The corrections economy is in some ways the more stable of the two pillars. The Bent County Correctional Facility and the Fort Lyon Correctional Facility together employ hundreds of people in positions that provide steady, government-scale wages, benefits, and long-term employment stability. Corrections officers, administrative personnel, case managers, healthcare staff, and facility maintenance workers represent a tenant population with reliable income that is largely insulated from the agricultural commodity price cycles that affect the rest of the local economy. Fort Lyon has an additional layer of significance: it serves as a transitional facility for homeless veterans, providing structured housing, services, and programming through the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless under a unique state-funded model. The veterans and staff associated with Fort Lyon represent a distinct housing need that intersects with both the public housing and private rental markets in Las Animas.
John Martin Reservoir and Outdoor Recreation
John Martin Reservoir State Park, located in the northeastern portion of Bent County, is Colorado’s second-largest body of water and one of the region’s premier outdoor recreation destinations. The reservoir draws anglers, boaters, campers, and birdwatchers — over 400 bird species have been recorded in and around the reservoir, making it one of the most productive birding locations on the Colorado plains. The nearby Bent’s Old Fort National Historic Site, a meticulously reconstructed 1840s trading post, attracts history-minded visitors year-round. These assets support a small but consistent tourism and recreation economy that generates some demand for short-term and seasonal lodging, though the conventional vacation rental market in Bent County is far less developed than in Colorado’s mountain resort communities.
The Section 8 Opportunity in a High-Poverty Market
With a Las Animas poverty rate exceeding 35% and a county-wide poverty rate above 17%, Bent County presents a rental market where a meaningful portion of potential tenants require housing assistance to afford market-rate units. The Las Animas/Bent County Housing Authority administers Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers for 124 families — a significant number relative to the county’s small population. For private landlords willing to participate in the voucher program, Section 8 offers a government-guaranteed rental income stream that eliminates the primary risk of renting to income-constrained tenants. Participating landlords receive payments directly from the Housing Authority for the subsidy portion of the rent, with tenants responsible for a portion based on their income. Properties must pass Housing Authority inspections and meet HUD habitability standards, which in practice means landlords must maintain units in genuinely good condition — a requirement that is both a compliance obligation and a tenant retention advantage in a market where well-maintained housing is scarce.
Practical Realities of Bent County Landlording
Operating rental property in Bent County requires honest acknowledgment of what this market is and is not. It is not a market with appreciation potential that will generate equity-based returns. It is not a market with sufficient depth to support professional property management services — landlords here self-manage or rely on trusted local agents. It is not a market where rents will ever approach Front Range levels, regardless of property quality. What it is, for the right landlord with the right local connections, is a stable cash-flow market where well-maintained, reasonably priced housing will rarely sit vacant, where good tenants in stable corrections or government employment can remain for years or decades, and where the lack of outside investor competition means acquisition prices remain genuinely affordable relative to any reasonable rent multiple.
The 2024 Colorado legal changes — particularly the just-cause eviction requirement and the habitability response timelines — apply in Bent County exactly as they do in Denver or Boulder. A landlord whose furnace fails at midnight in January in Las Animas has the same 24-hour life-safety response obligation as one in Centennial. The difference is that Las Animas is more than 100 miles from Colorado Springs, and the pool of available emergency HVAC contractors is far thinner. Building reliable local contractor relationships — with plumbers, electricians, and HVAC technicians who know this community and can respond quickly — is not optional for responsible landlords in Bent County. It is the operational foundation without which compliance with state habitability law is impossible.
Bent 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. Section 8 voucher program administered by Las Animas/Bent County Housing Authority — (719) 456-2748. High radon potential — testing recommended. Evictions filed in Bent County Court. Consult a licensed Colorado attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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