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Rifle, Colorado

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Rifle

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Rifle, CO

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STR Regulations for Rifle, Colorado

Overview: Are STRs allowed in Rifle, CO?

  • Explicit answer: Yes, short-term rentals (rental of a residential dwelling for fewer than 30 consecutive days) are allowed in Rifle, Colorado. There are no city-specific short‑term rental ordinances provided in the sources. Accordingly, state‑level Colorado regulations apply. You are responsible for sales and lodging tax collection/remittance, and you must comply with any applicable homeowners’ association (HOA) covenants and general zoning and building/fire/life‑safety requirements.

Note on scope: The provided sources do not include any Rifle-specific or Garfield County–specific STR regulations. All guidance below reflects Colorado state‑level requirements and widely applicable operational best practices identified in the sources.

How to start a short‑term rental business in this market

  • Select a compliant property
    • Confirm the property is residential and permitted for overnight lodging under local zoning; check deed restrictions and HOA covenants. HOAs can prohibit or limit STRs through recorded covenants and require a supermajority vote to amend.
    • Confirm the unit complies with building, fire, life‑safety, and sanitation standards (e.g., working smoke/CO detectors, safe egress, adequate sanitation).
  • Obtain a Colorado sales tax account
    • Register for a Colorado Sales Tax License with the Colorado Department of Revenue (DOR) to collect/remit lodging and sales taxes. If you use a platform like Airbnb or VRBO, you still remain liable if the platform fails to collect/remit.
    • Collect and remit state and any applicable local lodging taxes. Remit monthly or quarterly per DOR schedule.
  • Establish operations
    • Draft house rules (occupancy, quiet hours, parking, smoking, events).
    • Prepare a local contact/agent who can respond to complaints quickly (operationally wise even if not required locally).
    • Implement recordkeeping for bookings, taxes, and safety checks; maintain at least 12 months of booking/tax records.
  • Marketing and listings
    • Comply with any truthful advertising rules; include occupancy limits, license/tax information where required elsewhere in CO (e.g., Denver requires inclusion in ads).
    • If you partner with a property manager or platform, verify they will collect/remit taxes and provide you matching records.
  • Insurance and taxes
    • Maintain appropriate liability/property insurance for short‑term lodging.
    • File federal/state income taxes; track deductions (depreciation, supplies, utilities, platform fees, cleaning, local taxes).

Required documents, permits, licenses, and guidelines

  • At minimum:
    • Colorado Sales Tax License (for lodging/sales tax) – Colorado DOR
    • Booking records for the last 12 months (best practice; required for any “legal nonconforming” or legacy processes elsewhere in CO)
    • Sales tax remittance reports matching bookings (best practice for verification)
    • Proof of ownership and identity
    • HOA approval (if applicable) and compliance with recorded covenants
    • Local contact information for tenant/guest issues
    • Insurance certificate
  • Where applicable in Colorado:
    • STR-specific local license/permit (not cited for Rifle)
    • Lodger’s tax and/or accommodation tax collection/remittance where imposed
    • Proof of compliance with occupancy/parking/fire safety standards
  • Your property may not be eligible if:
    • It is deed-restricted affordable housing (some CO jurisdictions explicitly disqualify such units)
    • HOA covenants prohibit short‑term rentals and are enforceable
    • It is in a zone district that disallows lodging uses

Specific regulations (state‑level; no city‑specific rules identified)

  • State law context:
    • Colorado has enacted marketplace facilitator rules. Platforms that broker lodging must collect and remit Colorado sales tax on behalf of hosts; however, hosts remain responsible for compliance if a platform fails to do so.
    • Statewide, many jurisdictions regulate STRs through licenses/permits, occupancy limits, and local lodging taxes; none of those city-specific rules are shown for Rifle in the sources.
  • Taxes:
    • You must collect and remit state sales tax (and lodging/accommodation taxes where applicable) on the total rent, including cleaning fees, for stays under 30 consecutive days.
    • Marketplaces (Airbnb, VRBO) commonly handle collection/remittance in Colorado, but hosts should retain matching booking and tax reports.
  • HOA and covenants:
    • HOAs may prohibit or restrict STRs. Amendments to recorded covenants require a high owner vote (at least 67% by statute unless the declaration specifies a higher threshold).
  • Practice tips (from Colorado legal analysis):
    • Confirm HOA rules before listing; owners—not platforms—bear ultimate compliance liability.
    • Keep robust records; align booking histories with sales/lodging tax filings.
    • Monitor legislative changes that could affect property tax classification of STRs or authorize local excise/lodging taxes.

Local contacts (Rifle/Colorado) and authoritative resources

  • City of Rifle (zoning/land use and general municipal administration)
    • Phone: (970) 625‑5000
    • Address: 202 Railroad Ave, Rifle, CO 81650
    • Website: cityofrifle.com
    • Note: Use for zoning/use confirmation, business licensing questions, and building/fire code compliance; not a dedicated STR office is identified in the sources.
  • Colorado Department of Revenue (taxation)
    • Phone: (303) 238‑7878
    • Website: tax.colorado.gov
    • Use for sales/lodging tax registration, returns, and marketplace facilitator questions.
  • Colorado Short‑Term Rental Alliance (statewide advocacy/education)
    • Website: coloradostra.org
    • Note: Useful for staying current on state and local STR policy developments.
  • Booking platform tax reporting (confirm):
    • Airbnb tax portal and VRBO tax portal (hosts can download transaction records; verify tax remittance status).

Links to source pages

  • Colorado Lawyer Magazine (April 2022), “The State of Short‑Term Rentals in Colorado”: cl.cobar.org/features/the-state-of-short-term-rentals-in-colorado/
  • Summit Daily (Sep 11, 2025), “New short-term rental organization wants to address regulatory issues in Colorado’s resort towns”: www.summitdaily.com/news/colorado-short-term-rental-regulation-new-organization-forms/
  • Steamboat Pilot (Sep 9, 2022), “STR regulations are going into effect. How do they work?”: www.steamboatpilot.com/news/str-regulations-are-going-into-effect-how-do-they-work/

Summary for investors

  • Rifle has no city-specific STR ordinance in the sources, so operate under Colorado state rules and general local compliance requirements. Your primary legal obligations are: (i) collect/remit state sales/lodging taxes (often handled by platforms, but you are ultimately liable); (ii) comply with HOA covenants and zoning; (iii) maintain safety standards; and (iv) keep accurate records. For land use or business licensing questions, contact the City of Rifle. For tax issues, contact the Colorado Department of Revenue. For regulatory tracking and advocacy, engage with COSTRA.

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Rifle?

Rifle hosts earn a median $31,186/year with $167 ADR and 62% occupancy.

Top performers pull in $45,154+ per year.

See the full Rifle market breakdown →

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Rifle

Market Saturation Score

036912
Mild Saturation
2/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
2–4 declining months: early saturation pressure - watch for trend persistence.
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Photos of Rifle

Overview of Rifle

Rifle is a home rule municipality in and the most populous community of Garfield County, Colorado, United States. The population was 10,437 at the 2020 census. Rifle is a regional center of the cattle ranching industry located along Interstate 70 and the Colorado River just east of the Roan Plateau, which dominates the western skyline of the town. The town was founded in 1882 by Abram Maxfield, and was incorporated in 1905 along Rifle Creek, near its mouth on the Colorado. The community takes its name from the creek.

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