Beautiful Outdoor Dog Kennels

We Manufacture Comfortable and Safe Environments for Your Special Pets

Commercial Dog Kennel Laws in Colorado

Like this? Share it!

commercial dog kennel laws in CO

Under PACFA (Title 35, Article 80 of the Colorado Revised Statutes), any “pet animal facility”, which includes commercial kennels engaging in breeding, boarding, grooming, training, or selling dogs, must be licensed and inspected. The law sets basic definitions (e.g., what constitutes a dog breeder, small-scale vs large-scale) and mandates that facilities meet minimum standards of housing, sanitation, ventilation, medical care, and recordkeeping. Non-compliance can lead to penalties including license denial, suspension or revocation, and civil fines.

Do I Need A Dog Kennel License in Colorado?

dog kennel laws in colorado

Yes,  if you operate a business that qualifies as a “pet animal facility” under PACFA,  for example, boarding, breeding, selling, transferring, grooming, or training dogs commercially, then you must obtain a license from the Colorado Department of Agriculture. The license is required before operation and must be renewed annually, following the passing of any required inspections. If the operation is purely a private hobby (e.g., a few dogs kept at home), the typical PACFA license may not be required, but local licensing or zoning might still apply. 

Do I Need An LLC For A Dog Kennel?

Creating a Limited Liability Company (LLC) for your dog kennel business is not required by Colorado’s PACFA law, but it is strongly recommended from a business, liability, and tax perspective. Structuring your kennel as an LLC helps separate your personal assets from business liabilities (such as animal injury, property damage, or regulatory fines), enhances professional credibility, makes it easier to open business bank accounts and insurance, and positions your business for growth and formal compliance. While you could run the kennel as a sole proprietorship, an LLC adds a level of legal and financial protection.

How Many Dogs Can You Own in Colorado?

There is no single statewide limit on how many dogs a person can own in Colorado as pets. However:

How Much Is A Dog Kennel License In Colorado?

The state of Colorado sets license fees under PACFA, though the exact amount can vary depending on facility type (hobby, small/large breeder, boarding/kennel) and may be updated by regulation. According to the license-fee provisions in the statute and rules, one must pay the application fee, inspection fee (if applicable), and annual renewal fee. For example, the statute (§ 35-80-105) covers license application fees. While specific numeric values may vary by year and facility size, you should check the CDA/PACFA website for the current fee schedule.

Dog Kennel Regulations By Industry in Colorado

commercial dog kennel laws in colorado

Across industry segments (breeding, boarding, grooming, training, sheltering), Colorado’s PACFA sets baseline regulatory requirements: licensing, inspections, facility standards (housing, sanitation, lighting, ventilation), record-keeping, veterinary care, age limits for sale of pets (e.g., puppies under 8 weeks), disclosure to consumers, and enforcement with penalties.

Each industry has additional specific rules; for example, breeders must meet the “dog breeder” definitions and transfer thresholds, and pet stores must include breeder license numbers in their advertisements. Boarding/training/grooming facilities must meet physical facility and care standards under PACFA rules. Local regulation may add further layers (zoning, local permits).

Dog Boarding Regulations in Colorado

If you operate a dog-boarding facility (dogs stay overnight, exercise yards, day-care), you must obtain a pet-animal facility license under PACFA (if you engage in boarding/handling multiple dogs commercially). The facility must meet standards for proper housing, sanitation, exercise, separation/ quarantine of sick animals, ventilation, and drainage. The CDA/PACFA FAQ states that licensed facilities must comply with lighting, heating/cooling, humidity, space, and enclosure requirements. Inspections are required, and complaints may trigger investigations. Local zoning and animal control codes will also apply (residential vs commercial zoning, maximum number of dogs, setbacks, noise/odor regulations).

Dog Vet Regulations in Colorado

Veterinary practices in Colorado are regulated under Title 12, Article 315 (Veterinary Practice Act) and overseen by the Colorado State Board of Veterinary Medicine (CSBVM). You must be a licensed veterinarian to provide veterinary services, including diagnosis, treatment, surgery, and prescription of medications. 

Clinics must maintain accurate records, ensure patient-animal-client relationships, and adhere to regulations governing the use of controlled substances. In addition, if you operate a facility that keeps animals (such as boarding, breeding, or sheltering), you must ensure that veterinary care standards under PACFA are applied, including adequate healthcare, records, and inspections. Starting a veterinary practice also requires business licensing, OSHA compliance, staff certification, insurance, DEA registration (for controlled substances), and state board approval.

Dog Grooming Regulations in Colorado

Dog grooming businesses (where you groom, bathe, nail-trim, clip dogs) in Colorado typically fall under Pet Animal Care and Facilities Act (PACFA) licensing if you handle more than a hobby number of dogs or offer grooming commercially. PACFA covers grooming, bathing, and handling as part of a “pet animal facility.” You’ll need a license (if applicable), comply with sanitation and safety standards (including proper drying, equipment, non-toxic shampoos, and safe handling), as well as fencing, non-slip floor surfaces, adequate drainage, ventilation, and record-keeping of animals in your care (including any grooming injuries/mishaps). 

Local city/county licenses and health/occupational permits may apply. Even if only grooming small numbers, it’s wise to ensure you’re licensed (or exempt) and your business meets local health, OSHA, insurance, and zoning codes.

Dog Shelter Regulations in Colorado

If you operate an animal shelter (public or private facility housing dogs for adoption, rescue, or impoundment), it must be licensed under PACFA as a “pet animal facility” (shelters are explicitly defined in § 35-80-102). The facility must meet standards for housing, sanitation, ventilation, isolation/quarantine of sick animals, veterinary care, record-keeping, and euthanasia protocols consistent with the law. It must permit inspections by the Division of Animal Welfare in the CDA. 

The shelter must also comply with local codes (zoning, building, health) and may need to report escapes, deaths, or mistreatment. Non-compliance may lead to license suspension, revocation, or fines under § 35-80-113.

Dog Trainer Regulations in Colorado

If you run a dog-training business, whether it’s obedience work, behavior modification, or service-dog training, you may fall under the Pet Animal Care and Facilities Act (PACFA) and be classified as a “pet animal facility” if you take in multiple dogs for training. In that case, you’ll need to apply for the appropriate PACFA facility license, meet the required standards for housing and training areas, ensure proper ventilation and sanitation if dogs stay on-site, keep accurate health records, and be prepared for inspections by the Colorado Department of Agriculture.

You’ll also need to check local zoning, business licensing, and any specialized requirements (especially for service/assistance-dog training). Behavioral trainers without boarding facilities may still fall under local business regulations, though they may be exempt from full facility licensing; check with CDA.

Dog Breeder Regulations in Colorado

Under PACFA, “dog breeder” is defined in § 35-80-102, including categories: hobby breeder (transfers ≤ 24 dogs/year) and small/large scale breeder (transfers 25–99 dogs/year or 100+ dogs/year). Breeders who transfer dogs for sale, trade, or otherwise must obtain a pet animal facility license if the activity meets the threshold. Breeders must meet standards for housing, veterinary care, record-keeping, and sanitary conditions, and comply with consumer-protection laws (e.g., the “Pet Store Consumer Protection Act” § 35-80-108.5, requiring disclosure of breeder license numbers and prior violations in ads). 

Local jurisdictions may impose additional zoning or breeding-specific regulations. Inspections and enforcement apply; violations can lead to penalties. Recent proposed updates to PACFA rules (2025) may increase scrutiny on breeders for enclosure size, camaraderie, vaccination, and isolation of imported animals.

K-9 Dog Facilities in Colorado

K-9 dog facilities (for example, law enforcement canine training/boarding, detection dog facilities, schutzhund clubs, working dog kennels) typically fall under similar licensing frameworks if they house, train, transfer, or board dogs commercially. They may need a pet animal facility license under PACFA if they are in the business of transferring or selling dogs or operating a kennel commercially. 
Additionally, they must verify that local zoning allows specialized uses (law-enforcement training, boarding, kenneling) and may require specialized insurance, certification (for working dogs), and inspection. Because the regulation is primarily through PACFA and local animal control/zoning laws, it’s crucial to confirm with the CDA and local planning/animal-control offices whether your particular K-9 dog facility is exempt (for law enforcement only) or needs full licensing.

Dog Kennel Laws By City in Colorado

In Colorado, kennel rules and requirements differ across counties and often depend on details like how many dogs you can keep, the property’s size, and local zoning laws. To get the most current and accurate information, contact your county’s planning or zoning office using the chart below.

ArvadaPlanning
AuroraPlanning & Business Development
BoulderPlanning & Development Services
BrightonPlanning & Zoning
BroomfieldPlanning
Castle RockPlanning
CentennialCommunity Development
Colorado SpringsPlanning
Commerce CityPlanning
DenverPlanning
EnglewoodPlanning & Zoning
EriePlanning & Development
Fort CollinsPlanning
FountainPlanning
Grand JunctionPlanning
GreeleyPlanning & Zoning
Highlands RanchDevelopment
LafayettePlanning & Building
LakewoodProperty Development
LittletonLand Planning
LongmontPlanning & Development
LovelandPlanning
NorthglennPlanning & Development
ParkerPlanning
PuebloPlanning & Development
ThorntonPlanning & Zoning
WestminsterPlanning
WindsorPlanning

Dog Kennel Laws By County in Colorado

Kennel laws in Colorado vary from county to county and are typically based on factors such as the number of dogs permitted, the size of the property, and specific local ordinances. For the most accurate and up-to-date information, reach out to your county’s planning or zoning department using the chart below.

Adams CountyPlanning & Development
Alamosa CountyLand Use & Development
Arapahoe CountyPlanning & Land Development
Archuleta CountyPlanning
Baca CountyZoning
Bent CountyCounty Website
Boulder CountyPlanning & Zoning
Broomfield CountyPlanning
Chaffee CountyCommunity Planning
Cheyenne CountyPlanning & Zoning
Clear Creek CountyPlanning
Conejos CountyLand Use
Costilla CountyPlanning & Zoning
Crowley CountyPlanning & Zoning
Custer CountyPlanning & Zoning
Delta CountyPlanning & Community Development
Denver CountyPlanning
Dolores CountyCounty Website
Douglas CountyPlanning
Eagle CountyPlanning
El Paso CountyPlanning
Elbert CountyCommunity & Development
Fremont CountyPlanning & Zoning
Garfield CountyPlanning
Gilpin CountyPlanning
Grand CountyPlanning & Zoning
Gunnison CountyPlanning
Hinsdale CountyPlanning
Huerfano CountyLand Use & Building
Jackson CountyCounty Website
Jefferson CountyPlanning & Zoning
Kiowa CountyPlanning & Zoning
Kit Carson CountyLand Use
La Plata CountyPlanning
Lake CountyCommunity Planning
Larimer CountyPlanning
Las Animas CountyBuilding
Lincoln CountyLand Use
Logan CountyPlanning & Zoning
Mesa CountyPlanning
Mineral CountyPlanning & Zoning
Moffat CountyPlanning
Montezuma CountyPlanning & Zoning
Montrose CountyPlanning & Development
Morgan CountyPlanning & Zoning
Otero CountyLand Use
Ouray CountyLand Use & Planning
Park CountyPlanning & Zoning
Phillips CountyPlanning & Zoning
Pitkin CountyPlanning & Zoning
Prowers CountyPlanning
Pueblo County Planning & Development
Rio Blanco CountyPlanning
Rio Grande CountyPlanning
Routt CountyPlanning
Saguache CountyPlanning
San Juan CountyPlanning
San Miguel CountyPlanning
Sedgwick CountyPlanning & Zoning
Summit County Planning
Teller CountyPlanning & Zoning
Washington CountyPlanning & Zoning
Weld CountyPlanning & Zoning
Yuma CountyLand Use

Premium Commercial Dog Kennels for Your Business Needs

commercial dog kennels for sale in colorado

Looking for durable, professional-grade housing for your dogs or business? Our commercial dog kennels are designed to deliver unmatched quality, comfort, and functionality. Built with premium materials and customizable features, these kennels provide a safe, clean, and efficient environment for boarding facilities, breeders, groomers, and veterinary practices. Each structure is handcrafted by skilled Amish builders and can be customized with insulation, heating, and cooling options, and easy-to-clean surfaces to meet your exact needs. Whether you’re starting a new dog boarding business or upgrading your current setup, our custom commercial kennels offer the perfect blend of durability, style, and performance to keep your dogs happy and your operation running smoothly.

Have A Specific Question On Your State's Laws? We Will Find You An Answer!