Mineral rights laws by state · Colorado

Mineral Rights in Colorado Does not lapse

Owners in Colorado face no use it or lose it rule for minerals. The state never enacted a dormant mineral act, so leaving an interest idle does not forfeit it.

Quick answer: Mineral ownership in Colorado is durable. Colorado has no dormant minerals act, so severed minerals do not lapse through nonuse. It added a surface owner protection law in 2007. For an owner, that makes the real question what the interest is worth, not whether it survives.

Unused minerals
Does not lapse
Lapse period
Does not lapse
Surface damages act
Yes
Forced pooling
Yes
Governing statute
Not applicable
Source status
Sourced
Dormancy risk
0 / 100, rank 25 of 51
Key finding

Under current Colorado law, a severed mineral interest is not forfeited for going unworked. As of June 2026.

What this means for owners in Colorado

Because no clock applies, the practical questions become title and payment: whether ownership can be traced through the record, and whether royalties actually reach the owner. Colorado produced about 170.5 million barrels of crude oil and 1.9 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in 2025, according to the EIA, so mineral and royalty interests here trade actively.

Practical steps for an absent owner

The protective moves are simple: make sure the deed is recorded, that operators can reach you, and that no royalty check goes stale and escheats to the state.

Forced pooling in Colorado

Compulsory pooling applies in Colorado: a non consenting interest is folded into the unit and compensated as the statute directs.

Surface protection in Colorado

Colorado provides statutory surface protection, so a split estate operator must compensate the surface owner for the impact of development.

Common questions

Can mineral rights lapse in Colorado?

No. Time alone does not extinguish a severed mineral interest in Colorado.

How long before unused mineral rights lapse in Colorado?

There is no such period. An unused interest in Colorado does not expire.

Does Colorado allow forced pooling?

Yes, compulsory pooling is available in Colorado.

Cite this page

American Mineral Registry. Mineral Rights in Colorado. 2026. https://americanmineralregistry.com/research/states/colorado.html

This page is a plain language reference compiled from the state code and published legal analysis. It is general information, not legal advice. Confirm against the current Colorado code or a licensed attorney before acting.

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