Skip to content
STATE LICENSING GUIDE

Home Inspector Licensing in Colorado

A complete guide to working as a home inspector in Colorado — no state license required, but professional certification, recommended insurance, and local jurisdiction rules still set the bar. Plus the software Colorado inspectors trust to grow their business.

 RECOMMENDATION  DETAILS STATUS / RESOURCE 
Professional Certification

Voluntary, but the industry standard
Colorado doesn't license home inspectors, so most working inspectors join a national professional association to demonstrate training and adherence to a published standard. The two largest are the American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI) and the International Association of Certified Home Inspectors (InterNACHI). Both offer training, certification, ongoing CE, and member support.

InterNachi

ASHI

 

Liability & E&O Insurance
Strongly recommended even though not required
Colorado doesn't mandate insurance, but working inspectors typically carry general liability of $100K–$300K and errors & omissions (E&O) coverage of $250K–$500K. Most lenders, real estate brokerages, and home warranty companies require proof of coverage before referring you business — so insurance is functionally required even where it's legally optional.
 Recommended
Colorado Business Registration Required for operating any business in Colorado
Although Colorado doesn't license home inspectors specifically, you must register your business with the state to operate legally. Sole proprietors using their own legal name may be exempt; LLCs, corporations, and DBAs must file with the Colorado Secretary of State and stay current on periodic reports.
 Required
CO Secretary of State
HELPFUL RESOURCES
CO Secretary of State — Business Filing
sos.state.co.us

Colorado DORA (regulatory agencies)
dora.colorado.gov

Denver Residential Rental Inspection Program
denvergov.org
CDPHE Radon Program
cdphe.colorado.gov
National Home Inspector Examination — Colorado
nationalhomeinspectorexam.org
COLORADO AT A GLANCE
Pre-Licensing Education Not Required
State License Not Required
Liability & E&O Insurance Not Required (Recommended)
Business Filing Required (CO SOS)

 Ready to build your inspection business?

Join Colorado inspectors who use Spectora to schedule jobs, write reports, get paid, and grow — all from one place.

No credit card required

SAMPLE REPORTS

See What Your Colorado Reports Will Look Like

Spectora's reports are designed to meet your needs — clear findings, photo documentation, and professional presentation that protects you legally and impresses your clients.

WHY SPECTORA

Built for Colorado's Market

Colorado doesn't license home inspectors, so your reputation is your edge. Spectora helps you build a brand brokers and clients pick first — with reports, reviews, and referrals running on autopilot.

From Inspection to Invoice in One Tool

Schedule inspections, sign agreements, write reports, collect payments, and manage your clients — all in Spectora. No spreadsheets, no chasing PDFs, and no juggling disconnected tools. Just one login for your entire inspection business workflow.

Inspect Anywhere — Online or Off

From mountain cabins in the Rockies to remote Western Slope properties, Spectora's mobile app captures photos, notes, and findings on the spot and syncs the moment you're back online. Your work doesn't wait on a cell tower.

Automated Scheduling for Colorado Buyers

Denver's market keeps moving — and Colorado Springs isn't slowing down. Online scheduling, confirmation texts, and automated reminders make sure you never miss a job from Denver to Fort Collins to Boulder.

Grow Referrals From the Front Range to the Western Slope

Automated Google review requests after every report, plus a referral source tracker so you know exactly which agents and clients send you business across Colorado.

The Software Colorado Inspectors Trust

Spectora is the #1-rated home inspection software. Start your free trial and see why Colorado inspectors run their business on Spectora.

No credit card required

Disclaimer: This page is intended as a general informational resource and does not constitute legal advice. Licensing requirements, fees, and procedures are subject to change. Always verify current requirements directly with the CO Secretary of State before submitting your business application. Information last reviewed May 2026.