Colorado Court Fees, Filing Costs, and Fee Waiver Options

Colorado's court system imposes a schedule of mandatory filing fees and administrative costs that vary by court level, case type, and relief sought. These fees are set by statute and Colorado Judicial Department rule, and they directly affect access to civil and criminal court proceedings for individuals, businesses, and government entities. A formal fee waiver process — governed by Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure and Judicial Department policy — exists to preserve access for litigants who cannot afford standard costs. Understanding the fee structure and waiver pathways is essential for anyone navigating Colorado's courts at the district, county, or appellate level.

Definition and scope

Court fees in Colorado are charges imposed by the Colorado Judicial Department on parties who initiate or respond to legal proceedings. These fees are authorized under Title 13 of the Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S.), which sets the statutory framework for court costs, clerk fees, and related charges (Colorado Revised Statutes Title 13, Courts and Court Procedure).

Filing fees are distinct from:

The Colorado Judicial Department publishes a unified fee schedule covering district courts, county courts, the Colorado Court of Appeals, and the Colorado Supreme Court. Municipal courts set fees independently under municipal ordinance, though they operate within limits established by state law.

Scope and coverage limitations: This page addresses fees and waiver procedures within Colorado state courts — district, county, appellate, probate, and juvenile divisions. Federal court filing fees (governed by 28 U.S.C. § 1914 and the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado's local rules) are not covered here. Tribal court fee structures are a separate jurisdiction and are not within scope. For the regulatory and jurisdictional framework that situates these courts within the broader legal system, see Regulatory Context for Colorado's Legal System.

How it works

Fee assessment

When a party files an initiating document — a complaint, petition, or appeal — the clerk of court assesses the applicable fee at the point of filing. Payment is typically required before the clerk accepts the document. The Colorado Judicial Department updates its fee schedule periodically; the 2024 schedule is available through the Colorado Courts e-Filing system.

Representative filing fees (Colorado Judicial Department, 2024 schedule):

  1. District Court civil complaint (general jurisdiction): $224
  2. District Court domestic relations petition (dissolution of marriage): $230
  3. County Court civil complaint (claims up to $25,000): $31–$97, scaled by claim amount
  4. Small claims filing (claims up to $7,500): $31–$55, scaled by claim amount
  5. Colorado Court of Appeals — notice of appeal (civil): $223
  6. Colorado Supreme Court — petition for certiorari: $223
  7. Probate petition (estate administration): $199

Fees for Colorado small claims court process follow a separate, compressed schedule given the informal nature of those proceedings.

Service and transcript costs

Beyond filing fees, parties incur additional administrative costs:

Fee waiver (In Forma Pauperis)

Colorado courts accept applications to waive filing fees under C.R.C.P. Rule 409 and its county court equivalent. A litigant qualifies for waiver if household income does not exceed 125% of the federal poverty guidelines, or if the applicant receives public benefits such as Medicaid, Colorado Works (TANF), or Supplemental Security Income. The Colorado Judicial Department's JDF 205 form (Application for Court Costs/Fees) is the standard instrument for this process.

The waiver process involves three discrete steps:

  1. Complete and file JDF 205 simultaneously with the initiating pleading
  2. The clerk or judge reviews the application — in contested matters, a hearing may be set
  3. If granted, the order waives initial filing fees; ongoing costs such as transcripts may require a separate waiver order

A waiver granted at initiation does not automatically extend to all subsequent costs in the case. Appellate fee waivers require a separate application filed with the clerk of the relevant appellate court.

Common scenarios

Dissolution of marriage with fee waiver: A petitioner meeting income thresholds files JDF 205 with the domestic relations petition. If approved, the $230 filing fee is waived. Service costs may still apply unless the respondent accepts voluntary service.

Civil debt collection in county court: A creditor filing a collection claim of $8,000 pays a filing fee scaled to claim amount. If the creditor prevails, court costs — including the filing fee — may be recoverable against the defendant under C.R.S. § 13-16-122.

Appeal from district court: A party filing a notice of appeal to the Colorado Court of Appeals pays $223 at filing. If the appeal involves a fee-waived district court case, the party must apply separately for appellate fee waiver using the Court of Appeals' JDF 205 variant.

Probate estate opening: An estate with assets below the small estate affidavit threshold (set by C.R.S. § 15-12-1201) may avoid formal probate entirely, bypassing the $199 petition fee. Estates requiring formal administration pay the standard probate fee schedule.

The Colorado self-represented litigants framework addresses how pro se parties navigate fee applications without attorney assistance, which is particularly relevant to fee waiver processes.

Decision boundaries

The principal threshold distinctions in Colorado court fee administration:

Factor Standard Fee Applies Waiver Eligible
Income threshold Above 125% federal poverty level At or below 125% FPL
Public benefit receipt Not receiving qualifying benefits Receiving Medicaid, SSI, TANF
Court level District, county, appellate (all assessed separately) Waiver must be sought at each level
Case type Civil, domestic, probate, appeals Criminal defendants: fees set differently under C.R.S. § 16-11-501

Criminal defendants face a distinct fee structure. Costs such as public defender application fees, probation supervision fees, and cost-of-care fees in incarceration are governed separately under Title 16 and Title 17 of the Colorado Revised Statutes. The Colorado public defender system operates under its own eligibility and contribution-fee framework, separate from civil filing fee waiver rules.

For parties seeking information on accessing the full landscape of Colorado court structure and services, the Colorado legal services authority index provides an organized entry point to court-level reference pages across the state system.

Waiver denials are appealable. A party whose JDF 205 application is denied by a clerk may request judicial review; if denied by a trial judge, the denial is itself subject to appeal on the ground that it constituted an abuse of discretion under Colorado appellate precedent.

Fee schedules are subject to revision by the Colorado General Assembly through the annual appropriations and fee-setting process. Parties should verify current amounts directly through the Colorado Judicial Department's official fee schedule before filing.

References

📜 3 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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