Colorado Homeowner Resource
One lookup, two answers: verify that your contractor's license is real and current, and check what your jurisdiction actually requires for a reroof. Colorado has no statewide roofing license — this is handled locally, so who to call depends on where you live.
Two Birds, One Stone
Colorado has no single statewide roofing license or a single website where you can look up any contractor in the state. Licensing and code enforcement are handled jurisdiction by jurisdiction — sometimes by a city, sometimes by a county, sometimes by a regional department that covers several cities at once. That patchwork is exactly what out-of-state storm chasers count on: most homeowners have no idea who to call to check if a license is real.
This directory does two things at once. First, it gets you to the correct department to verify your contractor's license — confirm the number they gave you is real, current, and actually theirs. Second, it points you to what that same department requires for a reroof in your area — permits, inspections, and installation standards — so you know the floor your contractor should be meeting before you even discuss going beyond it.
Live now: Colorado Springs / El Paso County metro and the Pueblo metro area. We're building this out over time — Denver metro and Fort Collins metro are next, then more of the state. If your area isn't listed yet, reach out and we'll help you track down the right department directly.
The Directory
Type a city name to jump to the right department, or scroll to your metro area below.
No matches yet — that area isn't built out on this page. Contact us and we'll help you find the right department.
One department covers nearly the entire metro — a rare case where you don't need to guess which office to call.
Pueblo split into two separate departments effective January 1, 2026 — which department you call depends on whether you're inside city limits or in unincorporated Pueblo County.
Formerly the Pueblo Regional Building Department (PRBD) — renamed effective Dec 31, 2025. Existing PRBD licenses carried over automatically.
New department, launched January 1, 2026, to handle permitting for unincorporated Pueblo County after the split from the city department.
Unlike El Paso County, Denver metro has no single shared department — most cities run their own. We're verifying these one at a time rather than publishing unverified numbers; more are being added as they're confirmed.
Still being verified. If you need one of these now, contact us and we'll look it up directly.
Still confirming whether these run their own licensing or route through Larimer County. Contact us if you need one of these now.
We're adding more of the state over time. If your area isn't listed yet, contact us and we'll help you find the right department directly.
One More Thing
Because Colorado doesn't license roofing contractors at the state level — it's one of relatively few states that leaves this entirely to local jurisdictions. That means licensing standards, exam requirements, and even what counts as a "roofing contractor" license can vary from one building department to the next. A license that's valid in one jurisdiction may mean nothing in the next town over.
This is also why out-of-state storm-chasing contractors can operate the way they do: there's no single place a homeowner can check, so a contractor who isn't licensed anywhere nearby can still sound credible. Knowing exactly which department covers your address — and taking thirty seconds to actually call or search — closes that gap.