C.R.S. Section 39-22-303.6
Market-based apportionment of the income of a taxpayer engaged in business

  • allocation of nonapportionable income
  • rules
  • definitions

(1)

As used in this section, unless the context otherwise requires:

(a)

“Apportionable income” means:

(I)

Any income that would be allocable to this state under the United States constitution, but that is apportioned rather than allocated pursuant to the laws of this state; and

(II)

All income that is apportionable under the United States constitution and is not allocated under the laws of this state, including:

(A)

Income arising from transactions and activity in the regular course of a taxpayer’s trade or business; and

(B)

Income arising from tangible and intangible property if the acquisition, management, employment, development, or disposition of the property is or was related to the operation of the taxpayer’s trade or business.

(b)

“Commercial domicile” means the principal place from which the trade or business of the taxpayer is directed or managed.

(c)

“Nonapportionable income” means all income other than apportionable income.

(d)

“Receipts” means all gross receipts of the taxpayer that are not allocated under subsection (7) or (9) of this section, and that are received from transactions and activity in the regular course of the taxpayer’s trade or business; except that receipts of a taxpayer from hedging transactions and from the maturity, redemption, sale, exchange, loan, or other disposition of cash or securities are excluded.

(e)

“State” means any state of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any territory or possession of the United States, and any foreign country or political subdivision thereof.

(f)

“Taxpayer” means any person that is permitted or required pursuant to another provision of law to apportion and allocate income pursuant to this section.

(2)

For income tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2019, a taxpayer shall apportion and allocate the taxpayer’s entire net income as provided in this section.

(3)

Intentionally left blank —Ed.

(a)

A taxpayer that has no income from business activity outside of Colorado shall allocate all net income to Colorado.

(b)

A taxpayer that has income from business activity that is taxable both within and without Colorado shall apportion and allocate the taxpayer’s net income as provided in this section.

(c)

For purposes of apportionment and allocation of income under this section, a taxpayer’s income is taxable in another state if:

(I)

In that state, the taxpayer is subject to a net income tax, a franchise tax measured by net income, a franchise tax for the privilege of doing business, a corporate stock tax, or any similar tax; or

(II)

That state has jurisdiction to subject the taxpayer to a net income tax regardless of whether, in fact, the state subjects the taxpayer to such tax.

(4)

Intentionally left blank —Ed.

(a)

A taxpayer’s apportionable income shall be apportioned to Colorado by multiplying such apportionable income by a fraction, the numerator of which is the total receipts of the taxpayer in Colorado during the tax period and the denominator of which is the total receipts of the taxpayer everywhere during the tax period.

(b)

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, foreign source income that is included in taxable income is not included as receipts of the taxpayer in Colorado for purposes of apportioning apportionable income pursuant to this section.

(5)

Receipts from the sales of tangible personal property are in Colorado if:

(a)

The property is delivered or shipped to a purchaser in Colorado regardless of the f.o.b. point or other conditions of the sale; or

(b)

The property is shipped from an office, store, warehouse, factory, or other place of storage in Colorado and the taxpayer is not taxable in the state to which the property is shipped.

(6)

Receipts, other than receipts described in subsection (5) of this section, are in Colorado if the taxpayer’s market for the sales is in Colorado. The taxpayer’s market for sales is in Colorado if:

(a)

In the case of the sale of a service, to the extent the service is delivered to a location in Colorado;

(b)

In the case of the sale, rental, lease, or license of real property, to the extent the real property is located in Colorado;

(c)

In the case of the rental, lease, or license of tangible personal property, to the extent the tangible personal property is located in Colorado;

(d)

In the case of intangible property:

(I)

That is rented, leased, or licensed, to the extent the intangible property is used in Colorado, provided that the intangible property utilized in marketing a good or service to a consumer is used in Colorado if that good or service is purchased by a consumer who is in Colorado; or

(II)

That is sold, to the extent the intangible property is used in Colorado, provided that:

(A)

A contract right, government license, or similar intangible property that authorizes the holder to conduct a business activity in a specific geographic area is used in Colorado if the geographic area includes all or part of Colorado; and

(B)

Receipts from intangible property sales that are contingent on the productivity, use, or disposition of the intangible property are treated as receipts from the rental, lease, or licensing of the intangible property under subsection (6)(d)(I) of this section;

(III)

All other receipts for sales of intangible property that are not described in subsection (6)(d)(II) of this section are excluded from the numerator and denominator of the apportionment fraction set forth in subsection (4)(a) of this section;

(e)

If the state or states of assignment under this subsection (6) cannot be determined, the state or states of assignment must be reasonably approximated; and

(f)

With respect to any receipt, if the state of assignment cannot be determined under this subsection (6) or reasonably approximated under subsection (6)(e) of this section, such receipts are excluded from the denominator of the apportionment fraction set forth in subsection (4)(a) of this section.

(7)

A taxpayer’s rents and royalties from real or tangible personal property, capital gains, interest, dividends, patent or copyright royalties, or other income, to the extent that they constitute nonapportionable income, are allocated as follows:

(a)

Net rents and royalties from real property located in Colorado are allocated to Colorado;

(b)

Intentionally left blank —Ed.

(I)

Net rents and royalties from tangible personal property are allocated to Colorado:

(A)

If and to the extent that the property is utilized in Colorado; or

(B)

In their entirety if the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in Colorado and the taxpayer is not organized under the laws of, or the taxpayer’s income is not taxable in, the state in which the property is utilized.

(II)

For purposes of this subsection (7)(b), the extent of utilization of tangible personal property in Colorado is determined by multiplying the rents and royalties by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of days of physical location of the property in Colorado during the rental or royalty period in the taxable year and the denominator of which is the number of days of physical location of the property everywhere during all rental or royalty periods in the taxable year. If the physical location of the property during the rental or royalty period is unknown or unascertainable by the taxpayer, tangible personal property is utilized in the state in which the property was located at the time the rental or royalty payer obtained possession.

(c)

Capital gains and losses from sales of real property located in Colorado are allocated to Colorado;

(d)

Capital gains and losses from sales of tangible personal property are allocated to Colorado if:

(I)

The property had a situs in Colorado at the time of the sale; or

(II)

The taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in Colorado and the taxpayer’s income is not taxable in the state in which the property had a situs;

(e)

Capital gains and losses from sales of intangible property are allocated to Colorado if the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in Colorado;

(f)

Interest and dividends are allocated to Colorado if the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in Colorado;

(g)

Intentionally left blank —Ed.

(I)

Patent and copyright royalties are allocated to Colorado if and to the extent that:

(A)

The patent or copyright is utilized by the payer in Colorado; or

(B)

The patent or copyright is utilized by the payer in a state in which the taxpayer is not taxable and the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in Colorado.

(II)

For purposes of this subsection (7)(g), a patent is utilized in a state to the extent that it is employed in production, fabrication, manufacturing, or other processing in the state or to the extent that a patented product is produced in the state. If the basis of the receipts from the patent royalties cannot be reasonably assigned to states or if the accounting procedures do not reflect the states of utilization, the patent is utilized in the state in which the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is located.

(III)

For purposes of this subsection (7)(g), a copyright is utilized in a state to the extent that printing or other publication originates in the state. If the basis of receipts from copyright royalties cannot be reasonably assigned to states or if the accounting procedures do not reflect the states of utilization, the copyright is utilized in the state in which the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is located.

(h)

Nonapportionable income that is not otherwise allocated pursuant to this subsection (7) is allocated pursuant to subsection (9) of this section.

(8)

Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, for each taxable year commencing on or after January 1, 2019, a taxpayer may elect to treat all income as apportionable income. This election must be made in accordance with rules adopted by the department of revenue and made by the extended due date of the tax return. Once made, the election is irrevocable for the tax year.
(9)(a)(I) If the allocation and apportionment provisions in this section do not fairly represent the extent of business activity in Colorado of taxpayers engaged in a particular industry or in a particular transaction or activity, the executive director may, in addition to the authority provided in subsection (9)(b) of this section, and notwithstanding any other provision in this section, establish appropriate rules, including the application of a variance allowed under subsection (9)(b) of this section on an industry-wide, transaction-wide, or activity-wide basis, for determining alternative allocation and apportionment methods for such taxpayers.

(II)

A rule adopted pursuant to this subsection (9)(a) must be applied uniformly; except that, with respect to any taxpayer to whom such rule applies, the taxpayer may petition for, or the executive director may require, adjustment pursuant to subsection (9)(b) of this section.

(b)

If the apportionment and allocation provisions of this section do not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business activities in Colorado, the taxpayer may petition for, or the executive director may require, with respect to all or any part of the taxpayer’s business activities, if reasonable:

(I)

Separate accounting;

(II)

The inclusion of one or more additional factors that will fairly represent the taxpayer’s business activity in Colorado;

(III)

The inclusion of any receipts of a taxpayer otherwise excluded under subsection (1)(d) of this section, including those from hedging transactions or from the maturity, redemption, sale, exchange, loan, or other disposition of cash or securities; or

(IV)

The employment of any other method, notwithstanding any other provision of this section, to effectuate an equitable apportionment or allocation of the taxpayer’s income, fairly calculated to determine the net income derived from or attributable to sources in Colorado.

(c)

Intentionally left blank —Ed.

(I)

The taxpayer petitioning for, or the executive director requiring, the use of any method to effectuate an equitable allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer’s income pursuant to subsection (9)(b) of this section shall prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that:

(A)

The allocation and apportionment provisions in this section do not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business activity in Colorado; and

(B)

The alternative to such provisions is reasonable.

(II)

The same burden of proof applies whether the taxpayer is petitioning for, or the executive director is requiring, the use of any reasonable method to effectuate an equitable allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer’s income; except that, if the executive director can show that in any two of the prior five tax years, the taxpayer had used an allocation and apportionment method at variance with its allocation and apportionment method or methods in other tax years, then the executive director does not bear the burden of proof described in subsection (9)(c)(I) of this section in imposing a different method.

(d)

If the executive director requires any different method to effectuate an equitable allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer’s income pursuant to this subsection (9), the executive director shall not impose any civil or criminal penalty with reference to the tax due that is attributable to the taxpayer’s reasonable reliance solely on the allocation and apportionment provisions of this section.

(e)

A taxpayer that has received written permission from the executive director to use a reasonable method to effectuate an equitable allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer’s income shall not have that permission revoked with respect to transactions and activities that have already occurred unless there has been a material change in, or a material misrepresentation of, the facts provided by the taxpayer upon which the executive director reasonably relied.

(f)

If the executive director requires the taxpayer to change its present method of reporting, the executive director shall notify the taxpayer in writing of the reason for the required change. The notice must be made by first-class mail as set forth in section 39-21-105.5 and must be sufficiently particular to give the taxpayer adequate information as to the reasons for the change so that the taxpayer may frame an answer for and defend its present method of reporting if it decides to appeal.

(g)

The department of revenue, from time to time, shall publish all rulings of general public interest with respect to any application of this subsection (9).

(h)

If requested by the director of research of the legislative council, the executive director shall require taxpayers to provide additional information related to apportionment and allocation of income to support an income tax return for the purpose of providing such information to legislative council staff to improve the accuracy of fiscal notes and reports to the legislature. The executive director shall aggregate such additional information so as to preserve the confidentiality of the taxpayer’s information and comply with section 39-21-113.

(10)

A bank, savings and loan, credit union, or other taxpayer making or purchasing loans whose only business activity in Colorado is the ownership of property acquired through the process of foreclosure, or was obtained through a procedure exercised in lieu of the entity exercising its right to foreclose, which property is later disposed of within twenty-four months after obtaining ownership, shall directly allocate net income for such property during such time and any gains or losses realized from the sale of such foreclosed property to the state where the property is located. Such limited activities do not render a bank, savings and loan, credit union, or other entity subject to the other allocation and apportionment provisions of this section.

(11)

The executive director shall promulgate rules in accordance with article 4 of title 24 to apply and administer this section. Any rules that the executive director promulgated in order to apply and administer section 39-22-303, 39-22-303.5, or 24-60-1301 that may be used to apply and administer this section, including provisions to apply and administer the sales factor for special industries, which are set forth in 1 CCR 201-2, continue to be in effect unless inconsistent with this section or specifically withdrawn by the executive director.

(12)

On or before January 1, 2024, the director of the office of economic development shall prepare a report describing the economic impacts related to apportionment and allocation of taxable income pursuant to this section and deliver the report to the finance committees of the senate and house of representatives, or any successor committees.

Source: Section 39-22-303.6 — Market-based apportionment of the income of a taxpayer engaged in business - allocation of nonapportionable income - rules - definitions, https://leg.­colorado.­gov/sites/default/files/images/olls/crs2023-title-39.­pdf (accessed Oct. 20, 2023).

39–22–101
Short title
39–22–102
Legislative declaration
39–22–103
Definitions - construction of terms
39–22–104
Income tax imposed on individuals, estates, and trusts - single rate - report - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–104.5
Pretax payments - catastrophic health insurance
39–22–104.6
Pretax payments - medical savings accounts
39–22–105
Alternative minimum tax
39–22–106
Colorado personal exemptions of a resident individual
39–22–107
Income tax filing status
39–22–107.5
Income tax filing status - innocent spouse relief
39–22–108
Credit for tax paid other states
39–22–108.5
Dual resident trusts - income tax calculation
39–22–109
Income of a nonresident individual for purposes of Colorado income tax
39–22–110
Apportionment of tax in the case of a part-year resident
39–22–110.5
Reacquisition of residency during active duty military service
39–22–111
Accounting periods and methods
39–22–112
Persons and organizations exempt from tax under this article
39–22–114.5
Tax credit for investment in technologies for recycling plastics - repeal
39–22–116
Tax tables for individuals
39–22–119
Expenses related to child care - credits against state tax
39–22–119.5
Child care expenses tax credit - legislative declaration - definitions
39–22–120
Legislative declaration - state sales tax refund - offset against state income tax
39–22–121
Credit for child care facilities - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–122
Long-term care insurance credit
39–22–123
Earned income tax credit - refund of state excess revenues for fiscal years commencing on or after July 1, 1998
39–22–123.5
Earned income tax credit - not a refund of excess state revenues - trigger - legislative declaration - repeal
39–22–129
Child tax credit - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–201
Partners, not partnership, subject to tax
39–22–202
Resident partners - definition
39–22–203
Nonresident partners
39–22–204
Accounting periods and methods
39–22–206
Foreign source income of export taxpayers
39–22–300.1
Short title - citation
39–22–301
Corporate tax imposed - repeal
39–22–302
S corporations
39–22–303
Dividends in a combined report - foreign source income - affiliated groups - definitions
39–22–303.1
Interstate banking or branching - nondiscriminatory tax treatment
39–22–303.5
Single-factor apportionment of business income - allocation of nonbusiness income - rules - definitions
39–22–303.6
Market-based apportionment of the income of a taxpayer engaged in business - allocation of nonapportionable income - rules - definitions
39–22–303.7
Sourcing of sales of mutual fund service corporations - definitions
39–22–303.9
Apportionment of the income of a taxpayer with enterprise data center operations in the state - definitions
39–22–304
Net income of corporation - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–305
Consolidated returns
39–22–306
Accounting periods and methods
39–22–308
Credit allowed for purchase of Colorado coal
39–22–310
Legislative declaration - statutory interpretation and construction
39–22–320
Short title - citation
39–22–321
Definitions
39–22–322
Taxation of an S corporation and its shareholders
39–22–323
Modification and characterization of income
39–22–324
Basis and adjustments
39–22–325
Carryforwards and carrybacks - loss limitation
39–22–326
Part-year residence
39–22–327
Distributions
39–22–328
Returns - repeal
39–22–329
Tax credits
39–22–330
Uniformity of application and construction
39–22–340
Short title - citation
39–22–341
Legislative declaration
39–22–342
Definitions
39–22–343
Election
39–22–344
Imposition of tax
39–22–345
Owner exclusion
39–22–346
Credit for tax paid in other states
39–22–347
Credit for electing pass-through entity owner - tax preference performance statement - legislative declaration
39–22–401
Income of a resident estate or trust for purposes of Colorado income tax
39–22–402
Share of a resident estate, trust, or beneficiary in Colorado fiduciary adjustments
39–22–403
Income of a nonresident estate or trust subject to income tax
39–22–404
Share of a nonresident estate, trust, or beneficiary in income from sources within Colorado
39–22–407
Accounting periods and methods
39–22–501
Taxation of regulated investment companies
39–22–503
Taxation of real estate investment trusts - definitions
39–22–504
Net operating losses
39–22–504.5
Short title
39–22–504.6
Definitions
39–22–504.7
Medical savings accounts - establishment - contributions - distributions - restrictions - taxation - portability
39–22–507.5
Credits against tax - investment in certain property - repeal
39–22–507.6
Credits against corporate tax - investment in certain property - repeal
39–22–509
Credit against tax - employer expenditures for alternative transportation options for employees - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–514
Tax credit for qualified costs incurred in preservation of historic properties
39–22–514.5
Tax credit for qualified costs incurred in preservation of historic structures - short title - definitions
39–22–516.7
Tax credit for innovative motor vehicles - tax preference performance statement - definitions - repeal
39–22–516.8
Tax credit for innovative trucks - tax preference performance statement - definitions - repeal
39–22–517
Tax credit for child care center investments
39–22–518
Tax modification for net capital gains - definitions - repeal
39–22–520
Credit against tax - investment in school-to-career program - definitions
39–22–521
Credits against tax - employer expenses - public assistance recipients
39–22–522
Credit against tax - conservation easements - definition
39–22–522.5
Conservation easement tax credits - dispute resolution - legislative declaration
39–22–526
Credit for environmental remediation of contaminated land - legislative declaration - definition - repeal
39–22–529
Business expense deduction - labor services - unauthorized alien - definitions
39–22–531
Colorado job growth incentive tax credit - rules - definitions - repeal
39–22–532
Advanced industry investment tax credit - definitions
39–22–533
Instream flow incentive tax credit for water rights holders - rules - definitions - repeal
39–22–535
Credit for purchase of uniquely valuable motor vehicle registration numbers
39–22–536
Credit for food contributed to hunger-relief charitable organizations - definitions - repeal
39–22–537.5
Credit for personal property taxes paid - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–538
Credit for health-care preceptors working in health professional shortage areas - legislative declaration - definitions
39–22–539
Credit for employer contributions to employee 529 qualified state tuition programs - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–540
Credit - organ donor - leave of absence period - legislative declaration - definitions
39–22–541
Credit for retrofitting a residence to increase a residence’s visitability - tax preference performance statement - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–542
Tax credit for conversion costs for employee business ownership - definitions - declaration - repeal
39–22–543
Credit for wildfire hazard mitigation expenses - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–544
Credit against tax - qualifying seniors - creation - legislative declaration - definitions
39–22–545
Credit against tax - heat pump systems - heat pump water heaters - tax preference performance statement - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–546
Credit against tax - residential energy storage systems - tax preference performance statement - legislative declaration - definition - repeal
39–22–547
Early childhood educator income tax credit - tax preference performance statement - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–548
Colorado homeless contribution tax credit - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–549
Credit against tax - small food business recovery and resilience grant program equipment - community food consortium duties and responsibilities - tax preference performance statement - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–550
Tax credit for reducing emissions from certain lawn equipment - tax preference performance statement - legislative declaration - definitions - report - repeal
39–22–551
Industrial clean energy tax credit - tax preference performance statement - definitions - report - repeal
39–22–552
Tax credit for expenditures made in connection with a geothermal energy project - tax preference performance statement - definitions - repeal
39–22–553
Geothermal electricity generation production tax credit - tax preference performance statement - definitions - repeal
39–22–554
Heat pump technology and thermal energy network tax credit - tax preference performance statement - definitions - repeal
39–22–555
Electric bicycle tax credit - tax preference performance statement - definitions - repeal
39–22–556
Tax credit for sustainable aviation fuel production facility - tax preference performance statement - definitions - repeal
39–22–557
Clean hydrogen tax credit - qualified uses - tax preference performance statement - definitions - legislative declaration - repeal
39–22–558
Tax credit for employer’s contribution to employee for eligible expenses in connection with a qualifying home purchase - tax preference performance statement - legislative declaration - definitions
39–22–559
Film incentive tax credit - tax preference performance statement - review - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–601
Returns - repeal
39–22–601.5
Reporting federal adjustments - definitions
39–22–602
Failure to make return - director may make
39–22–603
Returns not made under oath
39–22–603.5
Frivolous returns
39–22–604
Withholding tax - requirement to withhold - tax lien - exemption from lien - annual statement - notice - definitions
39–22–604.3
Innovation reinvestment - withholding - transfers - bioscience - clean technology - short title - legislative declaration - definitions - repeal
39–22–604.5
Withholding tax - transfers of Colorado real property - nonresident transferors
39–22–605
Failure by individual to pay estimated income tax
39–22–606
Failure by corporation to pay estimated income tax
39–22–607
Estimated tax deposited with treasurer
39–22–608
Form, place, and date of filing return - extension - electronic filing
39–22–609
Payment of tax - applicable when
39–22–610
Relief for members of the armed forces of the United States - when
39–22–611
Property exempt from ad valorem taxes
39–22–621
Interest and penalties
39–22–622
Refunds
39–22–623
Disposition of collections - definition
39–22–624
Prior rights and liabilities not affected
39–22–625
Application of article - effective date
39–22–626
Applicability of amendments to this article to income tax years
39–22–627
Temporary adjustment of rate of income tax - refund of excess state revenues - authority of executive director
39–22–628
Direct deposit of refund to collegeinvest savings accounts - modification of individual income tax return forms - legislative declaration - definition
39–22–629
Advance payments of income tax credits - definitions
39–22–651
Short title - citation
39–22–652
Definitions
39–22–653
Taxpayer disclosure of reportable or listed transactions
39–22–654
Additional listed transactions - report
39–22–655
Penalty for failure to disclose a reportable or listed transaction
39–22–656
Material advisor - disclosure of reportable or listed transactions
39–22–657
Material advisor - maintenance of list
39–22–658
Material advisor - penalties
39–22–659
Waiver, reduction, or compromise of penalty for reasonable cause
39–22–701
Legislative declaration
39–22–702
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–703
Contributions credited to Colorado nongame conservation and wildlife restoration cash fund - administration - transfer
39–22–704
Repeal of part
39–22–801
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–802
Contributions credited to Colorado domestic abuse program fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–803
Repeal of part
39–22–1001
Limitations on voluntary contribution programs - queue - notice - reestablishment of certain programs
39–22–1301
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–1302
Contributions credited to homeless prevention activities program fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–1801
Legislative declaration
39–22–1802
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–1803
Contributions credited to the Special Olympics Colorado fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–1804
Repeal of part
39–22–1901
Legislative declaration
39–22–1902
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–1903
Contributions credited to the fund - appropriation
39–22–2001
Legislative declaration - revenues exceeding TABOR limit - sales tax refund
39–22–2002
Fiscal years commencing on or after July 1, 1998 - state sales tax refund - authority of executive director - repeal
39–22–2003
State sales tax refund - offset against state income tax - qualified individuals
39–22–2004
Temporary refund of excess state revenues from all sources - definitions - repeal
39–22–2005
Refund of excess state revenues from all sources - definitions - repeal
39–22–2101
Definitions
39–22–2102
Credit against tax - affordable housing developments - legislative declaration
39–22–2103
Recapture
39–22–2104
Filing requirements
39–22–2105
Parallel credits - insurance premium taxes
39–22–2106
Rules
39–22–2107
Compliance monitoring
39–22–2108
Report to the general assembly
39–22–2201
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–2202
Contributions credited to the fund - administration - transfer
39–22–2203
Repeal of part
39–22–2401
Legislative declaration
39–22–2402
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–2403
Contributions credited to Colorado healthy rivers fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–2404
Repeal of part
39–22–2901
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–2902
Contributions credited to the Alzheimer’s Association fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–2903
Repeal of part
39–22–3001
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–3002
Contributions credited to the military family relief fund - appropriation
39–22–3003
Repeal of part
39–22–3301
Legislative declaration
39–22–3302
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–3303
Contributions credited to the Colorado cancer fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–3304
Repeal of part
39–22–3601
Legislative declaration
39–22–3602
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–3603
Contributions credited to the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Colorado fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–3604
Repeal of part
39–22–3801
Legislative declaration
39–22–3802
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure
39–22–3803
Contributions credited to the unwanted horse fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–3804
Repeal of part
39–22–4301
Legislative declaration
39–22–4302
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–4303
Contributions credited to the American Red Cross Colorado disaster response, readiness, and preparedness fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–4304
Repeal of part
39–22–4401
Legislative declaration
39–22–4402
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–4403
Contributions credited to the Colorado for Healthy Landscapes fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–4404
Repeal of part
39–22–4501
Legislative declaration
39–22–4502
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–4503
Contributions credited to the Habitat for Humanity of Colorado fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–4504
Repeal of part
39–22–4601
Legislative declaration
39–22–4602
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–4603
Contributions credited to the Colorado Youth Conservation Corps fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–4604
Repeal of part
39–22–4701
Short title
39–22–4702
Legislative declaration
39–22–4703
Definitions
39–22–4704
First-time home buyer savings account
39–22–4705
Eligible expenses - penalties for other uses
39–22–4706
Forms
39–22–4707
Financial institutions
39–22–4801
Legislative declaration
39–22–4802
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–4803
Contributions credited to the Urban Peak Housing and Support Services for Youth Experiencing Homelessness fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–4804
Repeal of part
39–22–4901
Legislative declaration
39–22–4902
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–4903
Contributions credited to the family caregiver support fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–4904
Repeal of part
39–22–5001
Legislative declaration
39–22–5002
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–5003
Contributions credited to the Young Americans Center for Financial Education fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–5004
Repeal of part
39–22–5101
Legislative declaration
39–22–5102
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–5103
List of eligible charitable organizations
39–22–5104
Contributions credited to the donate to a Colorado nonprofit fund - creation - appropriation - distribution
39–22–5105
Initial funding
39–22–5201
Definitions
39–22–5202
Uninsured designation - required forms - rules
39–22–5301
Legislative declaration
39–22–5302
Voluntary contribution designation - procedure - effective date
39–22–5303
Contributions credited to Feeding Colorado fund - creation - appropriation
39–22–5304
Repeal of part
Green check means up to date. Up to date

Current through Fall 2024

§ 39-22-303.6’s source at colorado​.gov