Colo. Rev. Stat. § 38-12-509
Prohibition on retaliation.
Effective May 3, 2024L. 2008: Entire part added, p. 1826, § 3, effective September 1. L. 2019: Entire section amended, (HB 19-1170), ch. 229, p. 2313, § 8, effective August 2. L. 2023: (1) amended and (1.5) added, (HB 23-1254), ch. 169, p. 828, § 7, effective May 12. L. 2024: (1.5) amended, (HB 24-1098), ch. 113, p. 367, § 14, effective April 19; (1), (1.5), and (2) amended and (1.7) and (5) added, (SB 24-094), ch. 158, p. 726, § 8, effective May 3.
(1)
(a) A landlord shall not retaliate against a tenant by engaging in any of the activities specified in subsection (1)(b) of this section in response to the tenant:
- (I) Having made a good faith complaint to the landlord, to a nonprofit organization or third party, or to a governmental agency alleging a condition described by section 38-12-505 (1) or any condition that materially interferes with the life, health, or safety of the tenant;
- (II) Organizing or becoming a member of a tenants' association or similar organization; or
- (III) Exercising or attempting to exercise in good faith any right or remedy afforded to a tenant pursuant to section 38-12-507.
(b) Prohibited retaliation includes:
- (I) Increasing rent or decreasing services;
- (II) Terminating or not renewing a rental agreement or contract without written consent of the tenant;
- (III) Bringing or threatening to bring an action for possession;
- (IV) Taking action that in any manner intimidates, threatens, discriminates against, harasses, or retaliates against a tenant; or
- (V) Charging the tenant or seeking to collect from the tenant any fee, cost, or penalty.
(1.5) A tenant may assert that the landlord retaliated against the tenant in violation of subsection (1) of this section as a defense to a landlord's action for possession, including a landlord's action for possession based on:
- (a) A monetary or nonmonetary violation of the rental agreement;
- (b) A notice to terminate tenancy or vacate;
- (c) An expiration of the tenant's rental agreement; or
- (d) The nonpayment of rent resulting from a retaliatory rent increase.
- (1.7) To prove a claim or defense under this section, a tenant does not need to prove that retaliation was the sole reason a landlord engaged in any of the activities described in subsection (1)(b) of this section; a tenant need only demonstrate that the tenant's protected activity under subsection (1)(a) of this section was a motivating factor that influenced the landlord's decision to engage in any of the activities described in subsection (1)(b) of this section.
(2) If a landlord retaliates against a tenant in violation of subsection (1) of this section, the tenant:
- (a) Shall recover damages in an amount not more than three months' periodic rent or three times the tenant's actual damages, whichever is greater, plus reasonable attorney fees and costs; and
- (b) May terminate the rental agreement.
- (3) If a landlord elects to replace a malfunctioning appliance, but does so with a new appliance that is not identical to the appliance being replaced, there is a rebuttable presumption in favor of the landlord that the landlord's selection of a different appliance was not retaliatory so long as the replacement appliance provides substantially the same features as the original appliance.
- (4) (Deleted by amendment, L. 2019.)
- (5) Nothing in this section precludes a landlord from serving a tenant with a notice to terminate tenancy or a notice to vacate to the extent allowable under the law.
Source: L. 2008: Entire part added, p. 1826, § 3, effective September 1. L. 2019: Entire section amended, (HB 19-1170), ch. 229, p. 2313, § 8, effective August 2. L. 2023: (1) amended and (1.5) added, (HB 23-1254), ch. 169, p. 828, § 7, effective May 12. L. 2024: (1.5) amended, (HB 24-1098), ch. 113, p. 367, § 14, effective April 19; (1), (1.5), and (2) amended and (1.7) and (5) added, (SB 24-094), ch. 158, p. 726, § 8, effective May 3.
Editor's note: Amendments to subsection (1.5) by HB 24-1098 and SB 24-094 were harmonized.
Cross references: For the legislative declaration in HB 23-1254, see section 1 of chapter 169, Session Laws of Colorado 2023. For the legislative declaration in HB 24-1098, see section 1 of chapter 113, Session Laws of Colorado 2024.