A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Chaffee County, Colorado
Chaffee County has undergone a remarkable transformation over the past fifteen years. What was once a quiet, somewhat overlooked mountain county known primarily for whitewater rafting, Monarch Ski Area, and the agricultural heritage of the Arkansas River valley has become one of Colorado’s most in-demand destinations for people seeking a high-quality mountain lifestyle outside the price range of resort communities like Vail, Aspen, and Breckenridge. Salida in particular — with its nationally recognized arts community, thriving downtown, world-class whitewater park, and access to some of the best hiking, mountain biking, and skiing in Colorado — has been discovered in a way that has fundamentally changed its housing market. That transformation creates both significant opportunity and genuine operational challenges for residential landlords in this county.
Salida: Colorado’s Most Livable Small City
Salida has earned a string of national accolades in recent years — named among the best small mountain towns in America by multiple outlets, recognized for its arts scene, its outdoor recreation access, and the genuine community character that distinguishes it from purpose-built resort towns. The city’s population has grown from approximately 5,200 at the 2010 census to over 6,200 today, and the surrounding unincorporated county has seen even faster growth as remote workers, retirees from the Front Range and from other states, and outdoor-lifestyle seekers have arrived in numbers that the community’s housing stock was not built to accommodate.
The rental market in Salida reflects this demand surge with brutal clarity. Long-term rental vacancy rates are functionally near zero. When a quality long-term rental unit comes available in Salida, it is typically leased within days — often to the first qualified applicant who applies. Rents have risen substantially over the past decade, with two-bedroom units in reasonable condition now renting in the $1,400–$1,800 range and well-maintained single-family homes commanding $1,800–$2,400 or more. These rents are high relative to local wages — the county’s median household income of approximately $70,900 means that housing cost burden is a genuine issue for much of Salida’s workforce — but they are modest relative to the acquisition prices that now prevail for residential properties in the county, where median home values have risen sharply alongside Colorado’s broader mountain market appreciation.
Buena Vista: The Arkansas River’s Adventure Capital
Buena Vista, approximately 25 miles north of Salida along US Highway 24, sits at the foot of the Collegiate Peaks and along one of Colorado’s most celebrated stretches of whitewater. The development of the South Main neighborhood — a thoughtfully designed mixed-use community that brought new housing, retail, and a whitewater park to the Arkansas River corridor just south of downtown — accelerated Buena Vista’s transformation from a small agricultural and ranching town into a destination outdoor recreation community. The town’s population has grown to approximately 3,100, with median home values approaching $540,000 — a figure that would have been unimaginable a decade ago and that reflects the same in-migration dynamics reshaping Salida and other desirable Colorado mountain communities.
The rental market in Buena Vista is even tighter than Salida’s in some respects — the town is smaller, the housing stock is limited, and the demand from outdoor recreation workers, tourism industry employees, and lifestyle-motivated in-migrants consistently outpaces supply. A median rent of approximately $1,300–$1,600 reflects both the strong demand and the genuine income constraints of many Buena Vista workers in the hospitality, outdoor guiding, and retail sectors that anchor the local economy. Landlords in Buena Vista who can offer quality long-term rentals at prices accessible to the local workforce are providing a service that the community desperately needs and that the market will reward with consistent, low-vacancy occupancy.
The Remote Worker Effect
One of the most significant changes to Chaffee County’s rental market in the post-pandemic period has been the arrival of remote workers — professionals who are employed by companies in Denver, the Front Range, or other parts of the country and who have chosen to relocate to Salida or Buena Vista for quality of life reasons while continuing to work remotely. This tenant segment is particularly significant for landlords because remote workers typically bring Front Range or national-scale incomes to a market with mountain-small-town rent levels. A remote worker earning $90,000 per year from a Denver tech company who rents a two-bedroom house in Salida for $1,600 per month has a rent-to-income ratio that makes them an exceptionally low-risk tenant by any screening standard.
The remote worker influx has also contributed to the housing shortage by converting properties that might otherwise be available for long-term rental into owner-occupied housing, as remote workers with the financial capacity to purchase have bought homes in the county in large numbers. This dynamic has reduced the available rental stock while simultaneously creating demand from workers who arrive before they can purchase, creating a self-reinforcing cycle of rental scarcity.
Colorado’s 2024 Legal Framework in Chaffee County’s Context
Colorado’s 2024 just-cause eviction law applies in Chaffee County as it does statewide, but its practical impact here is muted by market conditions. In a market where qualified tenants are desperately seeking any available long-term rental, the scenario of a landlord wanting to remove a good-paying, low-maintenance tenant for no reason is largely hypothetical. The far more common challenge for Chaffee County landlords is the opposite: holding onto good tenants in a market where the cost of housing is pushing the workforce out of the community entirely. Landlords who provide fair, stable long-term housing will find that tenant retention is less a legal obligation than a natural market outcome — tenants who find a quality long-term rental in Salida or Buena Vista fight to keep it.
The habitability response requirements of SB 24-094 are more operationally challenging here than in urban markets. At elevations above 7,000 feet with harsh winters and limited contractor availability, the 24-hour life-safety response requirement for heating system failures demands real advance preparation. Landlords who do not have established relationships with local plumbers, HVAC technicians, and electricians will struggle to meet these timelines, particularly during peak winter months when demand for trades services throughout the county is highest.
Chaffee 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 Salida and Buena Vista must obtain local STR licenses. Wildfire risk — adequate insurance required. Evictions filed in Chaffee County Court. Consult a licensed Colorado attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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