
July 1 Changes: New Laws Hitting Wallets and Homes in Colorado
Those little "effective July 1" stories always sound boring right up until one of them reaches into your wallet.
And this year's batch absolutely does.

The Laws That Sneak Into Everyday Life
Every legislative session produces a mountain of bills. Most of them disappear into the machinery of government and don't affect your average Tuesday on the Western Slope.
The July 1 laws are different.
These are the changes you'll run into while buying ammunition, shopping for a house, renewing insurance, or dealing with school paperwork. Nobody throws a parade when they take effect. They just quietly become part of daily life.
From Ammo to Insurance: How New Colorado Laws Affect You July 1
Gallery Credit: Tim Gray
Your Wildfire Work Might Finally Count
If you've spent time and money clearing brush, trimming trees, or creating defensible space around your home, Colorado's new insurance requirements could matter.
Insurers will have to provide more transparency about how wildfire mitigation factors into coverage decisions and rates.
That's welcome news in places like Mesa, Delta, and Montrose counties, where homeowners have spent years being told to harden their properties against wildfire risk without always knowing whether it made a difference.
Read More: Colorado Bicycle Laws: A Guide for Road and Trail Riders
Sporting Goods Counters Are About to Get More Complicated
Several new laws focus on firearms and ammunition.
Buying ammunition now comes with new requirements, and Colorado is also tightening restrictions on ghost guns and firearms produced with 3D printers. For many gun owners, these changes will be the most noticeable because they'll encounter them the next time they make a purchase.
The Stuff You'll Actually Notice
First-time homebuyers could gain access to expanded assistance programs. Insurance rules are changing. Schools get new requirements.
None of it sounds particularly dramatic.
Then again, neither does a July 1 effective date until you're signing paperwork or opening a renewal notice and realizing the law changed while you were busy planning the Fourth of July.
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