Colorado Asset Search Services
U.S. Asset Records provides professional asset search services covering all 64 Colorado counties. Our investigation covers real property through county assessor and clerk offices, vehicles through the Colorado DMV, and business entities through the Colorado Secretary of State.
Order Colorado Asset SearchAll 64 Counties · Flat-Fee Pricing · 24-48 Hours · FCRA/GLBA Compliant
Quick Answer
A Colorado asset search from U.S. Asset Records costs $125 flat-fee and is delivered in 24 to 48 hours. It identifies real property, business interests, vehicles, watercraft, aircraft, UCC filings, and recorded judgments across all 64 counties and nationwide. Searches support Colorado judgment enforcement under C.R.S. Title 13, divorce, probate, and pre-litigation evaluation, with full FCRA, GLBA, and DPPA compliance. The subject is never contacted.
What is a Colorado asset search and how does it support litigation, judgment enforcement, divorce, and probate in Colorado?
A Colorado asset search is a professional investigation that identifies real property, business interests, vehicles, watercraft, aircraft, UCC filings, recorded judgments, and federal court records associated with an individual or business entity in all 64 Colorado counties and nationwide. Colorado asset searches support Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S.) Title 13 enforcement of judgments, C.R.S. Title 14 dissolution and equitable distribution in divorce, C.R.S. Title 15 Colorado Probate Code, fraudulent transfer claims under the Colorado Uniform Voidable Transactions Act (C.R.S. § 38-8-101 et seq.), and pre-litigation collectibility evaluation in Colorado District Court. U.S. Asset Records performs Colorado asset searches in 24 to 48 hours at flat-fee pricing of $125 per Asset Profile Report or $250 per FCRA-compliant Creditor-Status Profile, with findings sourced from county clerk and recorder filings, the Colorado Secretary of State, Colorado DMV, federal court (District of Colorado), and additional public records databases. Findings include source attribution suitable for use in Colorado District Court, Probate Court, and federal proceedings.
Colorado Asset Search at a Glance
| Service purpose | Identify assets in Colorado and nationwide for litigation and enforcement |
|---|---|
| Geographic coverage | All 64 Colorado counties + District of Colorado + nationwide |
| Price (non-creditor) | $125 flat-fee Asset Profile Report |
| Price (creditor-status, FCRA) | $250 flat-fee for collection use |
| Delivery | 24 to 48 hours · same-day rush available |
| Compliance | FCRA · GLBA · DPPA · FDCPA |
| CO-specific records | CO Secretary of State · 64 county clerk & recorders · CO UCC · CO DMV · CO District Court |
| Court system | CO District Court · County Court · Probate Court (Denver) · federal (District of Colorado) |
| CO enforcement statutes | C.R.S. Title 13 · C.R.S. Title 14 (divorce) · C.R.S. § 38-8-101 (Colorado UVTA) |
| Property regime | Common-law (separate property) state with equitable distribution in divorce |
| Major metros | Denver · Colorado Springs · Aurora · Boulder · Fort Collins · Pueblo |
| Confidentiality | Subject is never contacted or alerted to investigation |
| Provider | U.S. Asset Records (since 2018, law firms trust U.S. Asset Records) |
10 Colorado Public Record Sources Queried in Every Asset Search
- Colorado County Clerk and Recorder Offices (All 64 Counties): Each Colorado county maintains its own real property records system for deeds, deeds of trust, judgment liens, transcripts of judgment recorded under C.R.S. § 13-52-102, federal and state tax liens, mechanics liens, and lis pendens. High-value markets include Denver, El Paso (Colorado Springs), Arapahoe, Jefferson, Adams, Douglas, Boulder, Larimer (Fort Collins), Weld, and Broomfield.
- Colorado Secretary of State Business Filings: Domestic and foreign LLCs, corporations, limited partnerships, and limited liability partnerships filed with the Colorado Secretary of State. Colorado’s business filing system is fully digital and includes officer, member, manager, and registered agent records, plus entity status (good standing, delinquent, dissolved).
- Colorado UCC Filings (Article 9 at SOS): Uniform Commercial Code Article 9 filings recorded with the Colorado Secretary of State. Real-estate-related fixture filings are recorded at the county level.
- Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles: Vehicle, motorcycle, RV, trailer, and commercial vehicle registrations under DPPA permissible purpose. Colorado’s outdoor recreation economy creates substantial RV, trailer, and recreational vehicle ownership.
- Colorado District Court Records (All 22 Judicial Districts): Civil litigation, recorded judgments under C.R.S. § 13-52-102, lis pendens filings, mortgage foreclosure proceedings, and domestic relations matters. Colorado District Court is the state’s general jurisdiction trial court.
- Colorado County Court Records: County courts handle civil matters up to statutory jurisdictional limits, small claims, and certain other proceedings. Useful for identifying smaller judgments and collection matters.
- Denver Probate Court and County Probate Records: Denver operates a dedicated Probate Court; other counties handle probate within the District Court. Probate matters under C.R.S. Title 15 include estate inventories, will admissions, letters testamentary, and pending probate litigation.
- Federal District Court of Colorado: Colorado operates as a single federal district covering the entire state plus the U.S. Bankruptcy Court. PACER queries reveal pending federal litigation, bankruptcy filings, IRS tax liens, and federal civil cases including aerospace, tech, energy, and outdoor industry matters.
- U.S. Coast Guard National Vessel Documentation Center: Federally documented vessels with Colorado connections. Relevant for larger reservoir and lake vessels including those at Lake Dillon, Grand Lake, Cherry Creek Reservoir, and Pueblo Reservoir.
- FAA Aircraft Registry: Aircraft registered to Colorado individuals or entities. Major aviation hubs include Denver International, Centennial Airport (one of the busiest general aviation airports in the U.S.), Rocky Mountain Metropolitan, and Colorado Springs.
Colorado Judgment Enforcement Procedures Under C.R.S. Title 13
| CO Statute | Enforcement Procedure | Asset Search Application |
|---|---|---|
| C.R.S. § 13-52-102 (Judgment Lien) | Transcript of judgment recording creates real property lien | Identifies counties where debtor owns property for recording |
| C.R.S. § 13-52-102(2) (Lien Duration) | Judgment liens valid for six years (renewable) | Timeline tracking for lien renewal strategy |
| C.R.S. § 13-52-103 (Execution) | Writ of execution against non-exempt personal property | Identifies vehicles, equipment, business interests for levy |
| C.R.S. § 13-55-101 (Real Property Levy) | Sheriff’s levy and sale of real property | Identifies real property suitable for forced sale |
| C.R.S. § 13-54.5-101 et seq. (Garnishment) | Writ of garnishment for wages and intangible property | Identifies employer associations and third-party holders |
| C.R.C.P. Rule 69 (Debtor Examination) | Post-judgment discovery and debtor examination | Asset search informs targeted examination questions |
| C.R.S. § 13-52-117 (Receiver) | Receivership to take possession of assets | Asset findings support receivership petition |
| C.R.S. § 7-80-703 (LLC Charging Orders) | Charging orders against LLC membership interests | Identifies LLC memberships for charging order pursuit |
| C.R.S. § 38-8-101 et seq. (Colorado UVTA) | Colorado UVTA voiding actions | Timeline analysis identifies UVTA-actionable transfers |
| C.R.S. § 13-53-101 et seq. (Sister-State) | Domestication of foreign judgments under UEFJA | Pre-domestication asset picture supports filing strategy |
Colorado Divorce Asset Discovery Under C.R.S. Title 14
| Family Law Concern | Asset Search Findings | Equitable Distribution Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Marital property identification | All property acquired during marriage in Colorado or elsewhere | Equitable distribution under C.R.S. § 14-10-113 (not 50/50) |
| Separate property tracing | Acquisition dates support pre-marital, gift, and inheritance classification | Separate property excluded; appreciation may be marital |
| Appreciation of separate property | Timeline analysis of value increases during marriage | Increase in value of separate property treated as marital in Colorado |
| Hidden assets in spouse’s name | Cross-reference spouse name across all 64 CO counties + nationwide | Adds undisclosed property to marital estate |
| Family LLC and trust holdings | CO SOS + nationwide SOS cross-reference | Marital classification under In re Marriage of Balanson line of cases |
| Business interests producing income | Officer/member roles in CO and other state LLCs | Imputed income · business valuation under Colorado family law |
| Pre-action transfers and dissipation | CO county recordings vs filing date timeline | Economic fault / dissipation findings affect division |
| Mountain resort vacation property | Summit, Eagle, Pitkin (Aspen), Routt (Steamboat), San Miguel (Telluride) records | High-value resort property inclusion in marital estate |
How U.S. Asset Records Performs Colorado Asset Searches · 6 Step Methodology
- Step 1 – Build the Complete Subject Profile: Provide the subject’s full legal name, all known aliases or prior married names, last 5+ known Colorado and out-of-state addresses, date of birth (if available), spouse name (if applicable), and any known business affiliations or Colorado entity names.
- Step 2 – Map the Associated Party Network: Document the subject’s spouse, parents, adult children, siblings, business partners, and known close associates. Colorado asset concealment frequently uses family member nominee titling, mountain resort property in spouse names, and family LLC structures.
- Step 3 – Query All 64 Colorado Counties: A licensed analyst queries each county clerk and recorder office under subject and spouse names. Denver, El Paso, Arapahoe, Jefferson, Adams, Douglas, Boulder, Larimer, Weld, and Broomfield receive heightened attention given Front Range population concentration. Mountain resort counties (Summit, Eagle, Pitkin, Routt, San Miguel) are reviewed for high-value vacation property.
- Step 4 – Colorado Secretary of State Cross-Reference: All Colorado LLCs, corporations, and limited partnerships where the subject appears as member, officer, manager, or registered agent are catalogued. UCC Article 9 filings centralized at the CO SOS are reviewed. Delinquent entity status is flagged.
- Step 5 – Nationwide Cross-Reference Beyond Colorado: Many Colorado subjects own property in Arizona (Scottsdale, Sedona), Florida, Texas, Wyoming, New Mexico (Santa Fe, Taos), and California. Nationwide sweep ensures out-of-state holdings are not missed. Coast Guard documentation, FAA aircraft registry, and federal court records complete the picture.
- Step 6 – Deliver Source-Attributed Colorado Report: Professionally documented PDF report identifying every finding with full attribution: county clerk and recorder reception number, CO SOS entity ID, CO DMV plate registration, federal court PACER citation. Findings organized for direct use in Colorado District Court, County Court, Probate Court, and federal court filings.
Who Orders Colorado Asset Searches
- Denver and Front Range family law attorneys: Equitable distribution under C.R.S. § 14-10-113. Cherry Creek, Washington Park, Cherry Hills Village, and Greenwood Village high-net-worth divorces frequently involve concealment through Colorado LLCs, mountain resort property, and family trust structures.
- Boulder and Larimer County divorce counsel: Tech sector equity compensation tracing (Boulder tech corridor, Google, aerospace), and high-value Boulder, Niwot, and Fort Collins residential property.
- Colorado Springs and El Paso County family law: Military family practice supporting USFSPA compliance at Fort Carson, Peterson SFB, and the Air Force Academy. Cross-jurisdiction asset identification for relocating military families.
- Mountain resort divorce counsel: Aspen (Pitkin), Vail (Eagle), Steamboat Springs (Routt), Telluride (San Miguel), and Summit County high-net-worth divorces involving multi-million-dollar resort property and complex residency questions.
- Colorado collection law firms: Post-judgment enforcement under C.R.S. Title 13 across all 64 counties. Transcript of judgment recording in property-owning counties. Garnishment under C.R.S. § 13-54.5-101.
- Colorado commercial litigation counsel: Pre-litigation collectibility evaluation in Colorado District Court. Defendant asset picture for tech sector, aerospace, energy, and outdoor industry commercial disputes.
- Colorado probate attorneys: Decedent asset identification under C.R.S. Title 15. Denver Probate Court proceedings. Out-of-state holdings triggering ancillary administration in Arizona, Wyoming, and elsewhere.
- Colorado personal injury counsel: Defendant collectibility before contingency case acceptance. Significant given Colorado’s ski-injury, outdoor recreation, and traffic litigation practice.
- Federal court counsel (District of Colorado): Civil RICO predicate documentation, federal fraudulent transfer (11 U.S.C. § 548), securities fraud, and complex commercial litigation in the single Colorado federal district.
- Out-of-state attorneys with CO enforcement needs: Sister-state judgment domestication under C.R.S. § 13-53-101 (Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act) for enforcement against Colorado-located assets.
Colorado Homestead and Personal Property Exemptions Affecting Recovery
| Exemption | CO Statutory Reference | Practical Impact on Recovery |
|---|---|---|
| Homestead exemption | C.R.S. § 38-41-201 – approximately $250,000 (or $350,000 if elderly or disabled) | Substantial protection; raised significantly by 2022 legislation |
| Motor vehicle exemption | C.R.S. § 13-54-102(1)(j) – approximately $7,500 (or $12,500 if elderly or disabled) | One vehicle largely protected |
| Wage garnishment cap | C.R.S. § 13-54-104 – 20% disposable earnings or formula based on minimum wage | Slightly more debtor-protective than federal CCPA |
| Tools of trade | C.R.S. § 13-54-102(1)(i) – approximately $30,000 for trade or profession | Substantial protection for self-employed and professionals |
| Retirement accounts | C.R.S. § 13-54-102(1)(s) – retirement plans broadly exempt | ERISA, 401(k), IRA accounts largely unreachable |
| Household goods | C.R.S. § 13-54-102(1)(e) – approximately $6,000 | Standard household goods protection |
| Public assistance and benefits | C.R.S. § 13-54-102(1)(u) – public assistance, unemployment, disability exempt | Government benefits protected |
| Proceeds of homestead sale | C.R.S. § 38-41-207 – homestead proceeds exempt for two years | Proceeds protection extends temporarily after a sale |
Colorado Note: Colorado significantly raised its homestead exemption in 2022 to approximately $250,000 (or $350,000 for elderly or disabled owners). Tools-of-trade protection is also substantial at approximately $30,000. Real property equity beyond the homestead exemption and non-homestead investment property remain meaningful enforcement targets. Asset search findings combined with current exemption analysis give a realistic recovery picture under Colorado law.
Colorado Uniform Voidable Transactions Act Under C.R.S. § 38-8-101 et seq.
- Colorado adopted the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act: Colorado’s UVTA (formerly UFTA) is codified at C.R.S. § 38-8-101 through § 38-8-112, governing voiding of fraudulent transfers and obligations in Colorado.
- Actual fraud reach-back is four years under C.R.S. § 38-8-110: Claims based on actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud must generally be brought within four years of the transfer, or one year after the transfer could reasonably have been discovered, whichever is later.
- Constructive fraud (no intent required): C.R.S. § 38-8-105 and § 38-8-106 void transfers made for less than reasonably equivalent value when the transferor was insolvent or thereby rendered insolvent. No proof of intent required.
- Eleven badges of fraud under C.R.S. § 38-8-105(2): Listed badges include transfers to insiders, retention of possession, undisclosed transfers, transfers before significant debts, transfers of substantially all assets, absconding, removal of assets, concealment, less than reasonably equivalent value, insolvency at time of transfer, and unusual timing relative to litigation.
- Insiders defined broadly under C.R.S. § 38-8-102(8): Includes relatives, controlled entities, partners, directors, officers, and persons in control of the transferor. Transfers to insiders are presumed problematic.
- Pre-litigation transfers receive heightened scrutiny: Transfers within four years before significant debts arose, particularly to insiders, fall within the lookback framework. Asset searches document precise recording dates supporting timeline analysis.
- Federal bankruptcy parallels Colorado UVTA: Section 548 of the federal Bankruptcy Code provides federal remedies with a 2-year lookback, but Section 544(b) incorporates Colorado’s four-year reach-back via the strong-arm clause when a Colorado bankruptcy trustee uses Colorado state law.
- Transferee liability under C.R.S. § 38-8-109: Recipients of fraudulent transfers may be liable for the value of the transferred asset, with certain good-faith and value defenses available. Subsequent transferees may also have liability.
Last reviewed and updated: June 2026 · U.S. Asset Records editorial team
How does U.S. Asset Records compare to other Colorado asset search companies?
U.S. Asset Records differs from traditional Colorado private-investigator asset search firms in three measurable ways: transparent flat-fee pricing ($125 per Asset Profile Report versus consultation-gated quotes), documented Colorado-specific legal grounding (C.R.S. Title 13, homestead and exemption analysis, and county-level recording detail), and 24-to-48-hour delivery across all 64 counties. Many Colorado asset search providers lead with bank-account-search marketing but provide little state-specific procedural depth and require a phone consultation before disclosing price. U.S. Asset Records publishes pricing, methodology, and Colorado enforcement procedure openly, and delivers source-attributed findings suitable for Colorado District Courts and federal filings.
| Factor | U.S. Asset Records | Typical Colorado PI Asset Search Firm |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing transparency | $125 flat-fee, published | Consultation-gated; quote after call |
| Colorado statutory grounding | C.R.S. Title 13 mapped to procedure | Generic “we find hidden assets” copy |
| County coverage detail | All 64 counties | Rarely specified |
| Homestead/exemption analysis | Documented per Colorado law | Usually omitted |
| Turnaround | 24 to 48 hours | 5 to 14 days typical |
| Source attribution | Every finding documented | Variable |
| FCRA / GLBA / DPPA compliance | Built in, explained openly | Asserted, rarely detailed |
| No-hit refund | Full refund if no assets found | Rare |
Colorado County-Level Asset Search Coverage
U.S. Asset Records queries County Clerk and Recorder real property records in every Colorado county, not only the major metros. High-value markets receive document-level review while every other county is swept for real property, recorded judgments, and lien filings. Priority Colorado markets include Denver, El Paso (Colorado Springs), Arapahoe, Jefferson, Boulder, and Pitkin (Aspen).
- Metro concentration: Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs, and the mountain resorts represent the bulk of high-net-worth Colorado asset concealment activity and receive document-level review.
- Full statewide sweep: All 64 counties are queried so out-of-metro real property and rural holdings are never missed.
- Recording source: County Clerk and Recorder real property records are the authoritative Colorado real property record and are queried under subject and spouse names plus known entities.
- Court records: Colorado District Courts civil judgments, liens, and lis pendens filings are cross-referenced for existing creditor exposure.
Colorado Bank Account Searches: What Is Actually Legal
Many Colorado asset search advertisements lead with “bank account searches.” Here is the accurate legal position: bank account information is protected by the federal Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA). Bank account locates are lawful only for permissible-purpose users, principally FCRA-compliant collection of an existing judgment, and are not available for general pre-litigation or personal use. U.S. Asset Records provides bank account locates only within GLBA permissible-purpose limits as part of FCRA-compliant Creditor-Status work, and is transparent about when they are and are not available. Most Colorado matters are resolved through real property, business interests, vehicles, and recorded judgments, which an Asset Profile Report identifies in full at $125.
Colorado Asset Search · Frequently Asked Questions
- How much does a Colorado asset search cost? A Colorado asset search from U.S. Asset Records is $125 flat-fee for the Asset Profile Report or $250 for the FCRA-compliant Creditor-Status Profile. Pricing is published, not consultation-gated.
- How long does a Colorado asset search take? Standard delivery is 24 to 48 hours statewide. Same-day rush is available for hearings and trial deadlines.
- Does a Colorado asset search cover all counties? Yes. Every search covers all 64 counties plus nationwide cross-reference, not just Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs, and the mountain resorts.
- Can you find a Colorado debtor’s bank accounts? Bank account locates are limited by the GLBA to FCRA-compliant collection of an existing judgment. Real property, business interests, vehicles, and judgments are identified in every Asset Profile Report.
- What Colorado law governs judgment enforcement? C.R.S. Title 13 governs Colorado judgment enforcement. Colorado mountain resort property (Aspen, Vail, Telluride) and the separate-property appreciation rule require careful classification, with the 2022 homestead increase changing equity analysis.
- Is the Colorado subject notified? No. Investigations are conducted from public records and licensed databases only; the subject is never contacted.
Related Asset Search Resources
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Asset search services: judgment collection asset search divorce asset search probate estate asset search asset search for attorneys
Pricing & comparison: asset search cost best asset search company
Authoritative Sources & Colorado Legal References
This Colorado asset search guide references the following authoritative public and legal sources. U.S. Asset Records conducts all investigations in compliance with federal law.
- ▸ Colorado Secretary of State — business entity and UCC filings (coloradosos.gov)
- ▸ Colorado Judicial Branch — civil judgments and court records (coloradojudicial.gov)
- ▸ C.R.S. Title 13 — Colorado judgment enforcement statute
- ▸ U.S. Federal Trade Commission — Fair Credit Reporting Act (ftc.gov)
- ▸ Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (consumerfinance.gov)
- ▸ U.S. Coast Guard National Vessel Documentation Center — vessel ownership
- ▸ Federal Aviation Administration Aircraft Registry — aircraft ownership
“U.S. Asset Records has become our go-to resource for judgment collection support. Their reports are thorough, accurate, and have helped us recover millions in outstanding judgments.”
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Order NowWhat a Colorado Asset Search Covers
- Colorado real property in all 64 counties with assessed values, mortgage positions, and equity estimates
- Colorado vehicle records through the state motor vehicle agency
- Colorado Secretary of State business filings including corporations, LLCs, and partnerships
- Colorado UCC filings through the Secretary of State
- Colorado court records from state and federal courts
- Federal and state tax liens filed in Colorado counties
- Watercraft and aircraft registered in Colorado
Colorado’s Growing Legal and Real Estate Market
Indeed, Colorado’s population growth over the past decade has driven significant real estate appreciation, particularly in the Denver metro area (Denver, Arapahoe, Jefferson, Douglas, Adams, Boulder counties) and Colorado Springs (El Paso County). Rapidly appreciating property values mean more equity available for judgment enforcement. Our reports include assessed values and equity estimates for all Colorado real property.
Colorado Judgment Enforcement
Furthermore, Colorado provides judgment creditors with writs of garnishment (wages and bank accounts), writs of execution for personal property, and judgment liens on real property. Colorado’s homestead exemption is $250,000 ($350,000 for elderly or disabled), making properties with equity above these amounts reachable. Colorado Courts process enforcement through district court.
Our Colorado asset search supports divorce proceedings, pre-litigation evaluation, estate administration, due diligence, and business investigation. For attorneys, see our law firm services. Learn about what sets us apart and review our professional methodology.
“We use U.S. Asset Records for pre-litigation assessment on every significant case. Their asset searches help us advise clients on the viability of pursuing claims.”
Every day you wait is a day assets can be transferred, retitled, or concealed. Order your search now before the financial picture changes.
DIY County-by-County Search
Must know which counties to search. Misses out-of-state property. Cannot trace entity connections. No equity calculations. Takes weeks.
Professional Search ($125)
All counties + all 50 states simultaneously. Entity tracing. Equity calculations. Transfer analysis. Analyst notes. 24-48 hours.
What’s Included in Your Colorado Asset Search Report
Our Colorado asset search covers every major asset category across all 64 counties plus nationwide.
- Real property with assessed values, mortgage balances, lien positions, and net equity calculations
- Vehicles, watercraft, and aircraft with registration status and lien information
- Business entities with officer positions, registered agents, and filing status
- UCC filings showing secured collateral, equipment, inventory, and receivables
- Federal and state tax liens with amounts and priority positions
- Judgment liens from other creditors competing for the same assets
- Civil litigation history and bankruptcy filings
- Property transfer analysis documenting suspicious conveyances
- Analyst notes with strategic observations and enforcement recommendations
- Free consultation to discuss findings and next steps
Colorado Writ of Garnishment Procedures
Colorado provides both continuing and non-continuing writs of garnishment under C.R.S. Article 54.5. Continuing garnishment on wages lasts 180 days and captures the lesser of 25% of disposable earnings or the amount by which weekly earnings exceed 30 times federal minimum wage. Non-continuing garnishment on bank accounts freezes all non-exempt funds. Colorado also allows writs of execution on personal property through the county sheriff. The $250,000 homestead exemption ($350,000 for elderly/disabled) is moderate by western state standards, leaving significant real estate equity reachable in the Denver metro where median values exceed $550,000.
Colorado Cannabis, Energy, and Outdoor Recreation Industry Assets
Colorado’s legal cannabis industry creates asset categories unique to the state: dispensary licenses, cultivation facilities, commercial real estate zoned for cannabis operations, and business entity interests in cannabis companies. These assets can be worth millions but require specialized investigation because they often do not appear in standard business databases. Colorado’s energy sector (oil and gas on the Eastern Plains, renewable energy statewide) generates mineral rights, royalty interests, and commercial energy assets. The outdoor recreation and tourism industry, particularly in mountain resort communities, involves hotel and vacation rental properties, ski industry businesses, and adventure tourism companies with significant equipment and real estate.
“In divorce cases, finding undisclosed assets can make or break equitable distribution. U.S. Asset Records has helped my clients uncover property, vehicles, and business interests that spouses attempted to conceal.”
Colorado Asset Search by Region
Denver Metro
Denver, Arapahoe, Jefferson, Adams, and Broomfield counties. Colorado’s economic center with rapidly appreciating real estate, tech industry growth, and major corporate presence. The Denver Assessor maintains detailed property records.
Douglas & Elbert Counties
Among the wealthiest counties in the nation. Luxury residential communities (Castle Rock, Highlands Ranch, Parker), horse properties, and high-net-worth residents. Significant real estate equity targets for enforcement.
Boulder & Fort Collins
Boulder and Larimer counties. University of Colorado, Colorado State University, tech startups, outdoor recreation industry, and some of the highest per-capita wealth in the state.
Colorado Springs / El Paso
El Paso and Teller counties. Military installations (USAFA, Fort Carson, Peterson, Schriever), defense contractors, and the fastest-growing metro in the state. Rapidly appreciating suburban real estate.
Mountain Resort Communities
Summit, Eagle (Vail), Pitkin (Aspen), Grand, and Routt (Steamboat) counties. Luxury ski properties, vacation homes, and investment real estate. Undisclosed mountain property is one of the most common findings in Colorado asset searches.
Western Slope & Plains
Mesa (Grand Junction), Garfield, La Plata (Durango), and eastern plains counties. Oil and gas interests, ranching land, agricultural operations, and mining claims. Mineral rights are a significant asset category in western Colorado.
Colorado’s Booming Real Estate Market
Colorado has experienced dramatic real estate appreciation over the past decade, particularly along the Front Range corridor from Fort Collins to Colorado Springs. A property purchased for $300,000 ten years ago may now be worth $700,000 or more. This creates substantial equity above the $250,000 homestead exemption (C.R.S. 38-41-201) that is reachable by judgment creditors. Our reports calculate equity positions based on current assessments, mortgage data, and lien information.
Colorado Secretary of State Business Search
The Colorado Secretary of State provides one of the most transparent business entity search systems in the nation, with full officer, director, and registered agent disclosure for all Colorado corporations and LLCs. Our business asset search leverages this transparency to trace entity connections and identify business-held assets throughout Colorado and nationwide.
Colorado Mineral and Water Rights
In Colorado, mineral rights and water rights can be severed from surface property rights and owned independently. These rights can have substantial value, particularly in oil-producing areas of the DJ Basin and water-scarce regions along the Front Range. Our investigation identifies mineral and water right interests as part of every Colorado asset search.
Colorado Asset Search: Frequently Asked Questions
Do you cover all 64 Colorado counties?
Yes. Denver, Arapahoe, Jefferson, Douglas, El Paso, and all other counties searched simultaneously.
What is the Colorado homestead exemption?
Colorado provides a $250,000 homestead exemption ($350,000 for elderly/disabled). Property equity above this is reachable by creditors.
Can you search the Colorado Secretary of State?
Yes. All Colorado business entity filings including corporations, LLCs, partnerships, and trade names.
Is Colorado real estate a good target for judgment liens?
Yes. Rapidly appreciating values in the Denver metro mean many properties have significant equity above the homestead exemption.
How much does a Colorado asset search cost?
Flat-fee: $125 public or $250 certified. Skip trace $75. All 64 CO counties plus nationwide.
Can you find assets in Colorado mountain resort communities?
Yes. Undisclosed vacation property in Vail, Aspen, Breckenridge, Telluride, and Steamboat Springs is one of the most common findings in our Colorado searches. Summit, Eagle, Pitkin, and Routt counties are all covered.
Does Colorado have mineral and water rights?
Yes. Colorado mineral rights (oil, gas, coal) and water rights can be severed from surface ownership and held independently. These rights can have substantial value. Our investigation covers mineral deed filings and water court records.
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Asset Search, Asset Investigations & Asset Recovery Services
U.S. Asset Records provides every variation of asset search and asset investigation work nationwide. Whether you call it an asset search, asset investigations, or asset recovery investigation, our analysts deliver flat-fee, professional documentation in 24-48 hours.
Assets Search & Asset Searching
Nationwide assets search covering all 50 states. Our asset searching methodology pulls real estate records, vehicles, watercraft, aircraft, business holdings, UCC filings, and judgment liens. Whether you spell it “asset search” or “assets search,” the deliverable is the same comprehensive report.
Comprehensive Asset Searches
Full-spectrum asset searches across federal, state, and county-level data sources. When attorneys and creditors need exhaustive asset searches before judgment enforcement, this is the deliverable. Professional documentation, certified by licensed analysts.
Unclaimed Asset Search
An unclaimed asset search locates dormant accounts, forgotten property, escheated funds, and probate estate holdings. Common in estate administration, beneficiary disputes, and heir research. Our unclaimed asset search covers state treasury databases plus private holdings.
Search for Unclaimed Assets
The search for unclaimed assets is a critical step in probate administration and post-mortem financial reconciliation. Our investigators search for unclaimed assets across all 50 states using public records, court filings, and licensed data brokers.
Asset Recovery Services
Professional asset recovery services for creditors, judgment holders, and collection agencies. Our asset recovery services begin with a comprehensive asset locate, followed by enforcement strategy and supporting documentation for liens, levies, and garnishments.
Asset Recovery Investigation
An asset recovery investigation is the discovery phase that precedes legal collection action. Our analysts conduct asset recovery investigation work with FCRA, GLBA, and DPPA compliance, building defensible records for post-judgment enforcement.
Asset Investigations
Our asset investigations identify holdings that public-records databases miss. Asset investigations work covers shell entities, nominee ownership, trust holdings, and offshore disclosures. We pair asset investigations with full evidentiary documentation for litigation support.
Asset Investigations and Recovery
Asset investigations and recovery are two sides of the same workflow. The asset investigations and recovery process starts with locating assets and ends with documented enforcement support. We handle both phases under a single flat fee.
Licensed Asset Investigator
Every U.S. Asset Records report is conducted by a licensed asset investigator with decades of experience. Our asset investigator team works exclusively with attorneys, law firms, collection agencies, and creditors. No DIY databases — only licensed asset investigator workflows.
Asset Protection Investigator
An asset protection investigator examines fraudulent transfer schemes, nominee structures, and offshore concealment used to thwart legitimate creditors. Our asset protection investigator team specializes in piercing asset protection plans during divorce, judgment enforcement, and fraud investigations.
Ready to start your asset search, asset investigation, or asset recovery investigation? Order online — flat fee from $75, 24-48 hour delivery, all 50 states.
Start Asset Search NowU.S. Asset Records · The Nationwide Authority on Asset Search and Investigation
When you need professional assets search services, asset investigations, or asset recovery investigation support, U.S. Asset Records delivers verified, source-attributed reports in 24 to 48 hours at flat-fee pricing of $75 to $250. We are the trusted asset investigator for 500+ law firms and the recognized asset protection investigator for collection agencies, divorce litigants, probate administrators, and fraud examiners nationwide.
Professional Asset Searches and Investigation
Our nationwide asset searches identify every property, vehicle, business interest, and recorded encumbrance owned by an individual or entity. Whether you need asset searching for litigation discovery or comprehensive asset investigations for judgment recovery, our licensed analysts deliver complete coverage across all 50 U.S. states.
Asset Recovery Services and Investigation
Specialized asset recovery services support judgment creditors, collection professionals, and fraud victims. Each asset recovery investigation documents the assets, transfers, and concealment structures needed for civil RICO claims, fraudulent transfer recovery, and judgment enforcement. Our asset investigations and recovery workflow integrates skip trace, asset locate, and lien priority analysis.
Search for Unclaimed Assets
When you need a search for unclaimed assets on behalf of an estate, heir, or beneficiary, our unclaimed asset search service cross-references state treasurer escheat databases, dormant account indicators, and out-of-state holdings. Recover what state holdings have absorbed under escheat statutes without paying heir hunter contingency fees.
Licensed Asset Investigator Network
As an established asset investigator serving 500+ law firms since 2018, U.S. Asset Records combines licensed database access, federal privacy compliance, and source-attributed reporting that distinguishes professional asset investigations from consumer-grade tools. Our asset protection investigator services support both pre-litigation and post-judgment workflows.
Note on free asset searches: While many consumer tools advertise “free asset searches,” these tools generally lack the licensed database access, multi-source cross-verification, and source attribution required for legal use. Professional asset searches at flat-fee pricing of $75 to $250 are the standard for any litigation, collection, divorce, probate, or fraud investigation matter where the findings must be reliable and admissible.
Ready to order? Place your asset search online in 2-3 minutes. No contracts, no subscriptions, no minimums. Flat-fee pricing from $75 (Skip Trace) to $250 (FCRA-compliant Creditor-Status Profile). Same-day rush delivery available.