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Hinsdale County Colorado
Hinsdale County · Colorado

Hinsdale County Landlord-Tenant Law

Colorado landlord guide — Lake City, San Juan Mountains, most remote county in the lower 48 & CRS Title 38

🏛️ County Seat: Lake City
👥 Population: ~750
⚖️ State: CO

Landlord-Tenant Law in Hinsdale County, Colorado

Hinsdale County is, by most measures, the most extreme county in Colorado: the most sparsely populated (0.71 people per square mile — the lowest density in Colorado), the most remote (the county government itself describes it as “the most remote area in the United States’ lower 48 states”), the highest housing vacancy rate in Colorado (72% of all housing units are vacant or seasonal), and one of the most striking landscapes in the American West. Covering 1,123 square miles of the San Juan Mountains in southwest Colorado — 96.5% of which is public land managed by the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management — the county has a permanent population of approximately 750 people, with roughly 374 of them residing within the Town of Lake City, the county seat and only incorporated municipality. The Continental Divide crosses the county twice. Five peaks exceed 14,000 feet and more than 20 exceed 13,000 feet.

Lake City sits at an elevation of 8,671 feet on the Lake Fork of the Gunnison River, 55 miles south of Gunnison on Colorado Highway 149 (the Silver Thread Scenic Byway). The town’s permanent population of ~400 swells dramatically in summer months as second-home owners, tourists, jeepers, hikers, and anglers arrive. All landlord-tenant matters are governed by Colorado Revised Statutes (CRS) Title 38, Article 12, including the 2024 reforms. The county has no rent control. With only ~380 occupied housing units in the entire county and 72% of all units vacant or seasonal, Hinsdale County’s conventional rental market is essentially the smallest of any county in Colorado. Evictions are filed in Hinsdale County Combined Court in Lake City (7th Judicial District).

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📊 Hinsdale County Quick Stats

County Seat Lake City (~400 permanent residents)
Population ~750 (64th of 64 CO counties)
Population Density 0.71 people/sq mile (least dense in CO)
Housing Vacancy Rate 72% — highest in Colorado
Public Land 96.5% of county area
Rent Control None (state preempted statewide)
Landlord Rating 4/10 — Smallest market in CO; extreme remoteness; second-home dominated

⚖️ Eviction At-a-Glance

Just-Cause Eviction HB 24-1098: 90-day no-fault non-renewal notice required
Nonpayment Notice 10 days (demand + opportunity to pay)
Habitability SB 24-094: 72hr begin remedial action; 24hr life-safety
Late Fee Grace Period 7 days; max $50 or 5% past-due rent
Security Deposit Return 30 days; triple damages for wrongful withholding
Court Hinsdale County Combined Court — Lake City (7th Judicial District)
HB 25-1249 Security deposit cap: 1 month’s rent (effective Jan 1, 2026)

Hinsdale County Landlord Rules & Colorado Law

CRS Title 38 provisions and the unique realities of Colorado’s most remote and sparsely populated county

Category Details
The 72% Vacancy Rate: Second Homes as the Market Of Hinsdale County’s 1,365 housing units, 985 (72%) are vacant or seasonal — the highest vacancy rate of any county in Colorado. Only 380 units house year-round occupants. The entire county’s year-round rental inventory likely numbers in the dozens. The housing stock responds primarily to demand from second-home buyers with considerably higher purchasing power than local wages support — leaving local workers, volunteers, teachers, emergency responders, and county employees with few viable housing options. The county’s Comprehensive Affordable Housing Plan identifies a need for 100–112 additional units through 2035 to serve its resident workforce. For landlords who do own year-round rental units in Lake City, vacancy is essentially nonexistent: the demand from essential-service workers who need to live near their jobs (county employees, school staff, volunteer firefighters and EMS, shop owners, guides) is persistent and unmet.
Remoteness & Practical Landlording Challenges Hinsdale County’s extreme remoteness creates practical challenges that do not exist in any other Colorado county. The nearest hospital of any size is in Gunnison, 55 miles north over terrain that can be closed by snow, mudslide, or ice. Contractor availability is severely limited — plumbers, electricians, and HVAC technicians serving Lake City may be based in Gunnison or Montrose, with response times measured in hours or days rather than minutes. For landlords, the 24-hour life-safety habitability response requirement under SB 24-094 requires pre-arranged emergency contractor relationships — there is no plumber you can call at midnight who will arrive in an hour. Establish service agreements before any tenancy begins. Seasonal road closures, snowpack, and the county’s predominantly dirt-road infrastructure also affect property access and maintenance scheduling.
Just-Cause Eviction (HB 24-1098) Effective April 19, 2024. Landlords must have cause to evict or non-renew residential tenants who have occupied a unit for 12+ months. 90 days’ written notice required for no-fault non-renewals. Valid causes: nonpayment, material lease violations, criminal activity, nuisance, landlord/family occupancy, sale, substantial renovation, or withdrawal from market. Exemptions: owner-occupied SFH/duplex/triplex, sub-12-month tenancies, STRs, employer housing. In a county where the tenant pool of year-round residents is so small that a landlord literally may know every potential tenant by name, just-cause protections matter: displacing a year-round worker from the only available rental unit in a remote mountain community can be severely disruptive to both the tenant and the community.
Habitability at 8,671 Feet (SB 24-094) Effective May 3, 2024. Lake City’s elevation of 8,671 feet, combined with the San Juan Mountains’ extreme winter conditions, makes heating system maintenance a landlord’s primary habitability obligation. Temperatures regularly fall well below zero; without functional heat, pipes freeze within hours. The 24-hour life-safety response requirement applies fully — and with Hinsdale County’s contractor shortage, “responding within 24 hours” in practice means having a pre-arranged emergency contact who can either repair the system or provide alternative heating arrangements. Mountain leases must address: minimum temperature maintenance during tenant absences (55°F), pipe freeze prevention, snow removal from access paths, and roof load monitoring during heavy snowfall.
STR Market: Tourism-Season Cabins Summer tourism — jeeping on the Alpine Loop and other 4WD routes, fly fishing on the Lake Fork, hiking to the region’s 13,000 and 14,000-foot peaks, and visiting the Alferd Packer massacre site and Slumgullion Earthflow — drives a robust if brief STR season in Lake City. The town’s STR market consists overwhelmingly of vacation cabins and seasonal homes operated on platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo during the summer and fall. STRs are exempt from HB 24-1098’s just-cause provisions. Hinsdale County has essentially no ski industry and limited winter tourism compared to summer; STR operators should budget for very significant off-season vacancy. Verify current STR requirements with the Town of Lake City before advertising.
Security Deposits & HB 25-1249 Effective January 1, 2026, HB 25-1249 caps security deposits at one month’s rent. In Hinsdale County, where year-round rental units are scarce and rents tend to reflect rural Colorado rather than resort-level prices, the cap is manageable. However, mountain properties at this elevation are susceptible to significant damage from frozen pipes, roof ice dams, and heating system neglect. Thorough move-in documentation and a lease that clearly specifies tenant obligations around property winterization are essential protections. Late fees: 7-day grace period; max $50 or 5% of past-due rent. Return within 30 days; triple damages for wrongful withholding.

Last verified: April 2026 · HB 24-1098 · SB 24-094 · Hinsdale County

🏛️ Courthouse Information

Hinsdale County Combined Court — Lake City (7th Judicial District)

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Colorado

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical costs for a Hinsdale County eviction action

💰 Eviction Costs: Colorado
Filing Fee 85
Total Est. Range $150-$500
Service: — Writ: —

Colorado Eviction Laws

CRS Title 38, Article 12 — statutes, procedures, and landlord rights applicable in Hinsdale County

⚡ Quick Overview

10
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
10
Days Notice (Violation)
30-50
Avg Total Days
$85
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 10-Day Demand for Compliance or Possession
Notice Period 10 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes
Days to Hearing 7-14 days
Days to Writ 48 hours after judgment days
Total Estimated Timeline 30-50 days
Total Estimated Cost $150-$500
⚠️ Watch Out

HB 24-1098 (2024) increased notice period from 3 to 10 days for nonpayment. Tenant can cure by paying full rent owed. Late fees cannot be charged during the 10-day period. Landlord must accept partial payment if offered during notice period in some cases.

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📝 Colorado Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the County Court. Pay the filing fee (~$85).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Colorado eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Colorado attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Colorado landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Colorado — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Colorado's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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🏙️ Communities in Hinsdale County

Colorado’s most remote county

📍 Hinsdale County at a Glance

Most remote county in the lower 48 states. Least densely populated county in Colorado (0.71 people/sq mile). 96.5% public land. 72% housing vacancy — highest in Colorado. Alferd Packer, Colorado’s infamous cannibal, tried at the Lake City courthouse (1883). Slumgullion Earthflow: 700-year-old slow-motion landslide created Lake San Cristobal (CO’s 2nd largest natural lake). Susan B. Anthony spoke from courthouse steps (1877). Continental Divide crosses county twice. Weminuche Wilderness — largest wilderness area in Colorado.

Hinsdale County

Remote Landlord Essentials

The market: ~380 year-round occupied units in the entire county. If you own a year-round rental, expect near-zero vacancy — the workforce demand for local housing is severe and unmet. STR season is summer only; budget for winter vacancy. Establish emergency contractor relationships before any tenancy (nearest contractors are in Gunnison, 55 miles away). Lease essentials: minimum heat 55°F during absences, pipe freeze liability, snow removal, roof load monitoring. STR operators: verify Town of Lake City requirements. All Colorado landlord-tenant law applies in full.

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A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Hinsdale County, Colorado

Hinsdale County is, in measurable terms, the most extreme county in Colorado for a landlord to operate in: the smallest permanent population (approximately 750), the lowest population density (0.71 people per square mile — the least of any Colorado county), the highest housing vacancy rate in the state (72%), and a degree of geographic remoteness that the county’s own government describes as unmatched anywhere in the continental United States. The county covers 1,123 square miles of the San Juan Mountains’ most dramatic terrain, 96.5% of which is federal public land managed by the Forest Service and BLM, leaving less than 4% of the county’s area available for private ownership. The only incorporated municipality — Lake City, the county seat — has a permanent population of approximately 400 people living at 8,671 feet elevation in a mountain valley that becomes dramatically more populated in summer and essentially hibernates in winter.

Alferd Packer: Colorado’s Most Famous Cannibal

No account of Hinsdale County is complete without the story of Alferd Packer, whose 1883 trial at the Lake City courthouse produced one of the most quoted — if apocryphal — passages in Colorado judicial history. In February 1874, Packer set out as guide for a party of five prospectors departing the winter camp of Ute leader Ouray near present-day Montrose, bound for the Los Piños Indian Agency near Saguache. Ouray warned them not to attempt the crossing — even the Utes who had lived and hunted in these mountains for generations would not make this journey in winter. The party ignored his advice. Six weeks later, Packer arrived at the agency alone, seemingly well-fed, spending money freely from wallets belonging to the missing men. A search party found the bodies of the five prospectors at the foot of Slumgullion Pass, their flesh stripped. Packer escaped, changed his identity, and was not arrested until nine years later in Wyoming.

Returned to Lake City for trial in 1883, Packer was convicted of murder and sentenced to hang. The Colorado Supreme Court overturned the conviction on a technicality; a second trial resulted in a 40-year sentence that he served in the state penitentiary in Cañon City before being paroled in 1901. The area where his party became lost is still labeled “Cannibal Plateau” on maps; the site where the bodies were found is called Deadman’s Gulch. The CU Boulder student union restaurant is named the Alferd E. Packer Memorial Grill. The Hinsdale County Museum holds what travel publications describe as the largest collection of Packer memorabilia in existence. And Trey Parker — the Colorado native who co-created South Park — made his film-school debut with the 1993 musical comedy “Cannibal! The Musical,” based on the Packer story.

The Slumgullion Earthflow and Lake San Cristobal

Approximately 700 years ago, heavy rains weakened volcanic tuff on the southern flank of Mesa Seco and set in motion one of the most remarkable geological events in Colorado’s recent history: the Slumgullion Earthflow, a slow-motion landslide so massive that when it reached the Lake Fork of the Gunnison River it dammed the entire stream, creating Lake San Cristobal — Colorado’s second largest natural lake. The earthflow is still moving today, at rates as high as 20 feet per year in its active portion, separating pine trees on the hillside and providing geologists with an active natural laboratory for studying mass wasting. Alferd Packer himself, while describing where he had sheltered during the winter of 1874, identified “a large landslide” as a landmark — a description that, over a century later, helped researchers confirm the massacre site’s location. Designated a National Natural Landmark in 1983, the Slumgullion Earthflow is visible from Colorado Highway 149 and accessible from the Windy Point Overlook above Lake City.

The Rental Market: Scarcity, Workforce Need, and Second Homes

The numbers tell a stark story. Of 1,365 housing units in Hinsdale County, 985 are vacant or seasonal. Only 380 units house year-round occupants. The housing market responds to purchasing power from second-home buyers — who comprise roughly three-quarters of the county’s property tax base — rather than to local workforce wages. The result is a county whose essential services — schools, emergency response, county government, local businesses — depend on a year-round resident population that has no viable place to live. The county’s Comprehensive Affordable Housing Plan identifies a gap of 100–112 units needed through 2035, with approximately 32 households at the lowest income levels requiring rental assistance rather than new construction. For landlords who own or acquire year-round rental units in Lake City, this shortage creates a reliable, mission-critical demand that is almost impossible to find elsewhere in Colorado. The tenants who need these units are county employees, school teachers, restaurant and shop workers, guides, and the volunteers who staff the emergency services that make year-round habitation of this remote place possible.

Hinsdale County landlord-tenant matters are governed by CRS Title 38, Article 12. Just-cause eviction (HB 24-1098): 90-day no-fault non-renewal notice required; exemptions for owner-occupied SFH/duplex/triplex, sub-12-month tenancies, STRs, and employer housing. Habitability (SB 24-094): 72-hour begin remedial action; 24-hour for life-safety; pre-arrange emergency contractor relationships — nearest contractors in Gunnison, 55 miles away. Mountain lease essentials: minimum heat 55°F during absences, frozen pipe liability, snow removal, roof load monitoring. STR operators: verify Town of Lake City requirements before advertising; summer-only season with significant winter vacancy. Security deposits: HB 25-1249 caps at 1 month’s rent effective January 1, 2026; return within 30 days. Late fees: 7-day grace; max $50 or 5% past-due rent. Evictions filed in Hinsdale County Combined Court in Lake City (7th Judicial District). Consult a licensed Colorado attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

Neighboring Colorado Counties

← View All Colorado Landlord-Tenant Law

Disclaimer: This page provides general information about landlord-tenant law in Hinsdale County, Colorado and is not legal advice. Laws change frequently. Given the county’s extreme remoteness, landlords are especially encouraged to establish local legal and contractor relationships before any tenancy. Always consult a licensed Colorado attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

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