Permitting for Modular Homes in Colorado
What Counties Review, What Documents You Need, and How the Process Works
Once your engineering is complete, the next step in the modular home process is permitting. This is where your county reviews everything that will happen on your land. It is an important stage because the county approval determines when excavation can begin and when your foundation crew can start working.
Permitting can feel complicated, but it becomes much easier once you understand what the county is looking for and how the documents fit together.
At Rocky Mountain Modular Homes, we help you prepare everything you need to make this stage as smooth as possible.
The modular home itself is already approved at the state level through the Colorado State Modular Building Program. This means the county does not inspect or approve the structure of your home. Instead, the county focuses on the work that will be done on your land.
Counties review:
Their job is to ensure your project meets local land use and safety standards.
Every county works a little differently, but most modular home projects require some or all of the following:
Some counties combine these into a single submission. Others require each permit separately.
Here is the corrected and complete list, with ONLY Sandy’s correction added:
Submitting a complete package keeps your permit timeline moving and prevents delays.
Permitting timelines vary widely across Colorado. Some counties approve permits in a few weeks. Others take several months depending on workload, staff availability, and the completeness of your submission.
Factors that can slow down permitting:
One of the biggest advantages of working with Rocky Mountain Modular Homes is that we know exactly what counties look for and how to avoid common delays.
Once your permits are approved:
Permitting is a gateway stage. Once you pass through it, the physical work on your land officially starts.
We help you gather all required documents, coordinate engineering, communicate with contractors, and ensure the county gets a complete and accurate submission. Our goal is to remove the guesswork and keep your project moving forward without unnecessary delays.
In the next post, we will cover site work and what happens on your land once permits are approved.