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Equitable Distribution State

Colorado Divorce Settlement & Maintenance Calculator

Free Colorado maintenance calculator and settlement projection. Estimate maintenance, child support, and property division — then see if your settlement sustains your lifestyle through retirement. Takes under 3 minutes.

Calculate My Colorado Settlement & Maintenance
Property Division
Equitable Distribution
Marital property divided equitably. Courts consider each spouse's contributions.
Residency Requirement
90 days
Generally, you must meet this residency requirement before filing for divorce in Colorado. Verify current requirements with a local attorney.
State Income Tax
4.40% flat
This affects how much of your settlement you actually keep.
Median Home Value
~$560,000
Deciding whether to keep the house? See the full analysis.

Colorado Maintenance Calculator — How Maintenance Works

Advisory guideline: 40% of higher income minus 50% of lower income. Duration based on marriage length.
Estimate your Colorado maintenance. Use our free maintenance calculator to project payments and see how maintenance affects your finances long-term.

Colorado divorce: financial snapshot

Colorado follows equitable distribution — courts divide marital property fairly, but not necessarily 50/50. The financial impact of your settlement depends on more than just the split — it depends on taxes, housing costs, and whether your income can cover your expenses long-term.

Tax impact: Colorado has a state income tax rate of 4.40% flat. Factor this into your post-divorce budget — maintenance payments, investment income, and retirement withdrawals are all affected.

Housing: The median home value in Colorado is approximately ~$560,000. If you're considering keeping the family home, make sure you can afford the mortgage, taxes, insurance, and maintenance on a single income.

Colorado's flat 4.40% income tax applies to all income levels. The state's high housing costs — especially along the Front Range — make the keep-vs-sell housing decision particularly important.

What Colorado divorcing spouses need to know

Under current law, Colorado follows equitable distribution, meaning courts generally divide marital property fairly — but not necessarily 50/50. The court considers factors like each spouse's income, contributions to the marriage, and future earning potential.

The biggest financial mistake in divorce is accepting a settlement without knowing if it will actually sustain your lifestyle long-term. A settlement that looks fair on paper can still leave you short if you haven't accounted for inflation, the end of maintenance, or the real cost of keeping the family home.

That's what DivorceSmart can help with. Enter your proposed settlement numbers, and get an estimated year-by-year projection of your finances through age 100 — including what happens when income sources end and expenses change.

Will your Colorado settlement be enough?
Pro analysis starting at $19. No subscription. Under 3 minutes.
Run My Numbers →
SamplePro Analysis Preview

See how we model a equitable distribution settlement over 30+ years — including maintenance, housing, and income transitions.

Money lasts to
~Age 93
with current plan
Peak savings
~$892K
around age 58
Sell the home?
Age 100+
if equity is unlocked
Built for a fictional person — see how we model settlements over 30+ years. Pro starts at $19.
See Full Sample Analysis →
Read the full Colorado divorce guide
Deep dive into Colorado property division, maintenance, child support, and tax implications.
Colorado Divorce Settlement Guide →

Colorado city calculators

DenverColorado SpringsBoulderCherry Hills VillageCastle RockAuroraFort CollinsAspenCastle PinesDurangoSteamboat SpringsTellurideVailBreckenridgeCrested ButteEvergreen

Frequently asked questions about Colorado divorce

How is maintenance calculated in Colorado?
Advisory guideline: 40% of higher income minus 50% of lower income. Duration based on marriage length.
How is property divided in a Colorado divorce?
Marital property divided equitably. Courts consider each spouse's contributions.
How long do you have to live in Colorado to file for divorce?
Colorado requires 90 days of residency before you can file for divorce.

Other state calculators

AlabamaAlaskaArizonaArkansasCaliforniaConnecticutView all 50 states →

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DISCLAIMER
This page provides general informational and educational content about Colorado divorce laws and is not legal, financial, or tax advice. Colorado divorce laws, guidelines, tax rates, and property values change frequently and may have changed since this page was last updated. Every divorce involves unique circumstances. The information presented here may not reflect current law or apply to your specific situation. All projections generated by the calculator are estimates based on simplified assumptions. Consult a licensed family law attorney in Colorado and a qualified financial advisor for guidance specific to your case. Do not make legal or financial decisions based solely on this information.

From uncertainty to clarity in 3 steps

No account required. No credit card. Just your numbers.

01

Enter your numbers

Settlement amount, income, expenses, alimony, house — takes about 2 minutes. Everything runs privately in your browser.

02

See the projection

Get a year-by-year chart showing your net worth from now through age 100. Green, yellow, or red — you'll know where you stand instantly.

03

Model & export

Test different settlement terms to find which saves you the most money, compare offers side-by-side, and export a report for your attorney.

Built on objective, deterministic financial models

Every projection is deterministic — same inputs always produce the same outputs. Results are estimates based on the assumptions you provide.

Deterministic Math EnginePublished Tax & Actuarial DataEducational Tool Only
Free to explore

See what a Pro analysis looks like

We built a complete Pro analysis for a fictional person named Sarah. Explore every section — charts, what-if scenarios, risk timeline, negotiation leverage — so you can see what’s included before running your own numbers.

View Sample AnalysisNo sign-up required

You don’t need a $5,000 CDFA retainer to understand your own numbers

Start with the free projection. If the numbers raise questions you can’t answer, upgrade to Pro for $19 — one-time, no subscription — and discover which settlement terms could save you thousands.

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Not financial or legal advice. DivorceSmart is an educational planning tool. Always consult a qualified attorney and financial advisor before making settlement decisions.