HB 26-1106
signedEviction Protections for Tenants
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedHB 26-1106, also known as Eviction Protections for Tenants, aims to make it harder for landlords to evict tenants quickly by limiting the number of eviction cases that can be scheduled on a single day and providing more protections for tenants. The bill shields minors from being directly named in eviction complaints if their parents or guardians are already defendants. It also allows tenants who say they intend to pay overdue rent to avoid immediate judgment against them, giving them time to resolve the issue. Additionally, it offers relief to tenants facing delays due to various hardships like hospitalization or technical issues with court filings. The bill has been signed into law, meaning these protections are now in effect for Colorado residents.
Official Summary
The bill limits the number of forcible entry and detainer (eviction) actions that a county court schedules on one business day. The bill prohibits including a minor defendant as a named defendant in an eviction complaint when a parent or adult guardian is also listed as a defendant on the same complaint. The bill prohibits a court from entering judgment without a trial or a hearing when a tenant's answer to an eviction complaint expresses an intent to cure nonpayment. The bill specifies that the following reasons excuse a tenant from filing a timely written answer to an eviction complaint: A hospitalization, a sickness or injury, a reasonable accommodation request for a disability, a lack of proper service, a transportation issue, a complication related to electronic filing that was reasonably outside of the tenant's control, and a court issue that was reasonably outside of the tenant's control. When a tenant in an eviction action asserts that they were affected by one of the specified reasons, the bill requires a court to:Relieve a tenant from final judgment, vacate any judgment or writ of restitution that was issued, and provide the tenant with a reasonable amount of time to file an answer;Permit additional and amended pleadings; andExtend the trial date. The bill repeals appeals bond in eviction cases. The bill extends the time for executing a writ of restitution in an eviction action from 48 hours to 30 days, except in cases involving substantial violations. The bill prohibits the execution of writs in eviction actions during inclement weather.(Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced.)
Details
- Chamber
- House
- First action
- 2026-03-24
- Latest action
- 2026-02-03
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In House - Assigned to Judiciary
- OpenStates
- View source ↗