SB 22-086
signedHomestead Exemption And Consumer Debt Protection
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedSenate Bill 22-086, also known as the Homestead Exemption and Consumer Debt Protection Act, increases protections for homeowners in Colorado by raising the amount of their home value that is shielded from seizure due to debt. For regular homeowners, this protection goes up from $75,000 to $250,000, while elderly or disabled individuals see an increase from $105,000 to $350,000. The bill also broadens the definition of a homestead to include various types of dwellings and extends protections for two years after selling a home to three years. Additionally, it adds new exemptions for items like firearms, economic impact payments, health savings accounts, and reverse mortgage proceeds used for specific purposes. This bill has been signed into law, meaning these protections are now in effect for Colorado residents.
Official Summary
Colorado's statutory homestead exemption exempts a portion of a homestead from seizure to satisfy a debt, contract, or civil obligation. Section 2 increases the amount of the homestead exemption: From $75,000 to $250,000 if the homestead is occupied as a home by an owner of the home or an owner's family; and From $105,000 to $350,000 if the homestead is occupied as a home by an owner who is elderly or disabled, an owner's spouse who is elderly or disabled, or an owner's dependent who is elderly or disabled. Section 3 expands the meaning of "homestead" to expressly include a "dwelling", and section 4 defines a dwelling as conventional housing and personal property that is actually used as a residence, including any vehicle, trailer, vessel, camper coach, mounted equipment, railway car, shipping or cargo container, shed, yurt, or tiny home. Under current law, the proceeds from a homestead exemption or, if a homestead property is sold by the owner, the proceeds from the sale are exempt from execution or attachment for a period of 2 years if the person entitled to the exemption keeps the exempted proceeds separate and apart from other money. Section 5 expands this period to 3 years and extends the exemption to apply to proceeds from insurance covering destruction of homestead property, which proceeds are held for use in restoring or replacing the homestead property. Section 6 increases the maximum amounts of existing exemptions from levy and sale under a writ of attachment or execution for certain types of property and creates new exemptions for: Firearms and hunting and fishing equipment; Economic impact payments; Health savings accounts; and Money placed into a life expectancy set-aside account or similar reserve fund, escrow, or impound account, which money is derived from reverse mortgage proceeds that are designated for specific uses. Section 6 also recreates and decreases an exemption for money in depository accounts. Sections 6, 7, and 8 remove a requirement that a person must deposit child support payments in an account designated for the child and, with regard to child support payments and unemployment benefits, not commingle funds in order to claim an exemption for child support payments or an exemption for unemployment benefits. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)
Details
- Chamber
- Senate
- First action
- 2022-04-07
- Latest action
- 2022-01-20
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Finance
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Julie Gonzales (primary) · Democratic