Colorado County Courts: Small Claims, Misdemeanors, and Civil Matters
Colorado county courts occupy the first tier of the state's general trial court structure, handling the highest volume of cases in the Colorado judicial system. These courts process small claims disputes, class 1 and class 2 misdemeanor criminal matters, traffic offenses, and civil claims up to a statutory dollar threshold. Understanding how county court jurisdiction is drawn — and where it ends — is essential for litigants, legal professionals, and researchers navigating the Colorado County Courts landscape.
Definition and scope
County courts are courts of limited jurisdiction established under Article VI, Section 16 of the Colorado Constitution and governed by Title 13 of the Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S.). The Colorado Judicial Branch operates one county court per county, resulting in 64 county courts statewide — one for each of Colorado's 64 counties (Colorado Judicial Branch, Court Locations).
Civil jurisdiction extends to monetary claims up to $25,000 (C.R.S. § 13-6-104). Claims exceeding that threshold fall within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the district courts, which are addressed separately in the Colorado District Courts reference.
Criminal jurisdiction covers:
- Class 1 and class 2 misdemeanors
- Class 1 and class 2 petty offenses
- Traffic offenses and infractions
- Municipal ordinance violations when no municipal court exists
Small claims jurisdiction is a distinct procedural track within county court, capped at $7,500 per claim (C.R.S. § 13-6-403), with specific rules that limit attorney participation and streamline evidence presentation.
Scope limitations: This page addresses Colorado state county courts only. Federal matters, tribal court proceedings, and Colorado district court civil procedure fall outside this scope. The regulatory context for the Colorado legal system provides the broader statutory and constitutional framework within which county courts operate. Municipal courts, which handle city ordinance violations in municipalities that have established them, are a parallel but separate court category not covered here.
How it works
County court proceedings follow the Colorado Rules of County Court Civil Procedure (C.R.C.P.) for civil matters and the Colorado Rules of Criminal Procedure for criminal matters. The process differs by case type:
Small Claims Process (C.R.S. § 13-6-401 through § 13-6-415):
- Filing — The plaintiff files a Notice, Claim, and Summons form (JDF 250) at the county court clerk's office and pays a filing fee. Filing fees range from $31 to $55 depending on claim amount (Colorado Judicial Branch Fee Schedule).
- Service — The defendant must be served at least 15 days before the scheduled hearing date.
- Hearing — A judge or magistrate presides. Attorneys may appear only in limited circumstances; corporate entities must be represented by an officer or employee, not outside counsel.
- Judgment — Issued at the hearing or within a short period thereafter. Judgments are enforceable through garnishment, liens, and other collection mechanisms under C.R.S. § 13-52.
- Appeal — Small claims judgments may be appealed to the district court within 15 days of entry (C.R.S. § 13-6-311).
Misdemeanor Criminal Process:
- Arrest or Summons — The defendant appears following arrest or a court-issued summons.
- Advisement — The court advises the defendant of charges and constitutional rights at first appearance.
- Plea — Entry of guilty, not guilty, or no contest.
- Pretrial Motions and Hearings — Evidence suppression, continuances, or diversion program referrals.
- Trial or Disposition — Bench trial or, for class 1 misdemeanors, a jury of 6 (C.R.S. § 16-10-104).
- Sentencing — Class 1 misdemeanors carry penalties up to 364 days in county jail and/or a fine up to $1,000 (C.R.S. § 18-1.3-501).
The Colorado Judicial Branch's Online Court Resources portal supports electronic filing and case look-up for many county court matters.
Common scenarios
County courts handle a defined set of case categories that recur with high frequency across Colorado's 64 jurisdictions:
- Landlord-tenant disputes — Security deposit returns, eviction (unlawful detainer) actions, and property damage claims within the $25,000 civil threshold. Eviction proceedings follow an expedited timeline under C.R.S. § 13-40.
- Consumer debt collection — Creditors filing suit for unpaid balances on credit accounts, medical bills, or personal loans below the civil jurisdictional ceiling.
- Minor traffic and DUI matters — County courts handle most traffic infractions and class 2 misdemeanor traffic offenses, though felony DUI cases (fourth or subsequent offense) are elevated to district court.
- Neighbor and property disputes — Boundary encroachments, fence disputes, and nuisance claims where damages fall within county court civil limits.
- Returned check (NSF) actions — Colorado statute permits treble damages up to 3 times the face value of the check, not to exceed $1,500 above face value, in small claims (C.R.S. § 13-21-109).
- Petty offense violations — Class 1 petty offenses carry a maximum fine of $500 and up to 6 months in county jail (C.R.S. § 18-1.3-503).
Self-represented litigants appear frequently in county court proceedings. The Colorado Judicial Branch provides standardized forms and procedural information through its self-represented litigants resources.
Decision boundaries
The critical jurisdictional boundaries that determine whether a matter belongs in county court — versus district court, municipal court, or an alternative forum — turn on three factors: claim amount, offense classification, and subject matter.
County Court vs. District Court:
| Factor | County Court | District Court |
|---|---|---|
| Civil claims | Up to $25,000 | Over $25,000 |
| Criminal matters | Misdemeanors and petty offenses | Felonies |
| Family law | None (except child support enforcement in limited contexts) | Exclusive original jurisdiction |
| Probate | None | Exclusive original jurisdiction |
| Jury size (criminal) | 6 jurors (class 1 misdemeanor) | 12 jurors (felony) |
County Court vs. Municipal Court:
Municipal courts, where they exist, handle violations of city or town ordinances. County courts handle state law violations. A traffic ticket issued under Denver city ordinance goes to Denver County Court (which in Denver's consolidated city-county structure functions as the Denver County Court under C.R.S. § 13-6-105). In counties without a municipal court, the county court absorbs municipal ordinance jurisdiction by default.
Small Claims vs. General Civil:
Parties choosing the small claims track waive the right to formal discovery procedures and, in most cases, attorney representation at the hearing. The trade-off is speed and reduced filing costs. Defendants who face a small claims action and wish to file a counterclaim exceeding $7,500 must move the case to the general civil docket.
Appeals path: County court civil and criminal decisions are reviewed by the district court for that judicial district, not by the Colorado Court of Appeals — a structural distinction that affects the timeline and cost of post-judgment review. The broader framework governing court fees and costs in Colorado applies throughout this process.
The Colorado home page for legal system navigation provides an entry point for identifying which court level applies to a specific legal matter in Colorado.
References
- Colorado Judicial Branch — County Courts
- Colorado Revised Statutes, Title 13 — Courts and Court Procedure
- Colorado Revised Statutes, Title 16 — Criminal Proceedings
- [Colorado Revised Statutes, Title 18 — Criminal Code (Sentencing)](https://leg.