A 4-step system for Colorado deposit disputes
Built for renters who want Colorado's timing rule, written statement requirement, seven-day demand step, deduction limits, and follow-up letters organized before the situation gets harder to manage.
Why this exists
Colorado deposit disputes often turn on ordinary proof: the lease deadline, when the tenancy ended, when keys or possession were returned, what the landlord wrote down, and whether deductions were backed up.
We put the renter first. The system helps you preserve those facts and move from a clean move-out record to a firm demand only if needed.
What this actually does
This is built for the stage before court. It helps you document move-out, provide your current address, follow up after the Colorado deadline, make the seven-day written demand when stronger recovery is on the table, and keep deductions and evidence organized.
- documents termination, key return, surrender, and current address
- tracks Colorado's 30-day default and possible lease extension up to 60 days
- keeps written-statement, documentation, ordinary-wear, and preexisting-condition issues organized
- uses the seven-day demand and stronger-recovery language carefully, without overstating it
Watch this step
Colorado renters should send a clear seven-day written demand before filing for stronger wrongful-retention recovery. Keep proof of delivery and give the landlord a clean chance to fix the deposit problem.
What you get
Step 1 - Move-Out Notice and Current Address
Warm and preventive. It confirms move-out, key return, current address, and the deposit-handling record.
Step 2 - Seven-Day Deposit Demand
Firm and professional. Used after the Colorado timing issue appears, and written to preserve the pre-suit demand step.
Step 3 - Entitlement Notice
Assertive and statute-backed. It ties Colorado's deadline, forfeiture rule, documentation requirement, deductions, and amount owed together.
Step 4 - Final Demand Before Court
Final and serious. It gives one last written chance to resolve the deposit before deciding whether to file.
Short version
The free guides are enough if you want to build the process yourself. The paid system is the convenience layer: four Colorado-specific documents in the right order.
A clear Colorado sequence, ready to edit, instead of guessing what to send or when to escalate.
Get the Colorado Recovery SystemImportant: This is general educational information and not legal advice.