AI-drafted — not attorney-reviewed. This citation has not yet been attorney-reviewed. The source URL was not yet fetched, but a human attorney has not signed off on it.
Distribution Type
Equitable Distribution
Default Split
50 / 50
Income Adjustment
Equitable

Methodology

Equitable distribution

Colorado courts divide marital property equitably, weighing each spouse's contribution, economic circumstances, and the value of property set apart to each. The goal is a fair, not necessarily equal, division.

Statutory Factors

The following factors are commonly evaluated under Colorado law:

  1. Duration of the marriage
  2. Income and liabilities of each spouse
  3. Contributions to the marriage including homemaking
  4. Future earning capacity
  5. Tax consequences
  6. Waste or dissipation of marital assets
  7. Custodial needs
  8. Any other factors for fairness

Statute Reference

Citation: Colo. Rev. Stat. §14-10-113

Source: https://leg.colorado.gov/agencies/office-legislative-legal-services/colorado-revised-statutes

Source & verification AI draft
Citation
Colo. Rev. Stat. §14-10-113
Source URL
https://leg.colorado.gov/agencies/office-legislative-legal-services/colorado-revised-statutes
Fetched
Not yet fetched

The SHA-256 is a tamper / identity hash on the body text we captured at fetch time — not a third-party signature. It lets us prove what we rendered matches what we observed.

Reference Library

Colorado Property Division

Colorado follows equitable distribution under Colo. Rev. Stat. §14-10-113. Courts divide marital property in proportions that are fair and equitable, considering each spouse's economic circumstances, contributions to marital property, any prior marriage obligations, and other relevant factors. Separate property is not subject to division.

Citation: Colo. Rev. Stat. §14-10-113

Source: https://leg.colorado.gov/agencies/office-legislative-legal-services/colorado-revised-statutes

Last updated: 2026-05-19T01:39:53.570747