Colorado Capitol Watch

TEST SITE Login

Welcome Visitor

 
Forgot password?
----------
Subscribe for Current Session

My CCW Tools

Look Up Bills

Look Up Legislators

Legislative Year: 2025 Change
  •  
  •  

Bill Detail: HB25-1189

Return to list of bills

emailSend an email to your legislator

Title Motor Vehicle Registration Reform & Fees
Status House Committee on Transportation, Housing & Local Government Refer Amended to Appropriations (02/25/2025)
Bill Subjects
  • Transportation & Motor Vehicles
House Sponsors T. Mauro (D)
Senate Sponsors
House Committee Transportation, Housing and Local Government
Senate Committee
Date Introduced 02/10/2025
AI Summary
Summary

Current law sets fees for the titling and registration of vehicles and
authorizes county clerks, as authorized agents of the department of
revenue (department), to retain a portion of these fees to cover their costs.
The bill raises the fees for the following by $4 and allows the county
clerks to retain the additional $4:
  • Issuing:
  • Motor vehicle and other vehicle registrations
requiring license plates;
  • Temporary registration license plates;
  • A validation tab, sticker, decal, or certificate for
license plates; and
  • A certificate of title;
  • Filing, extending, or releasing a lien; and
  • Obtaining a copy of a recorded title.
The department must increase these fees to account for inflation,
but the department may not increase a fee more than 5% per year.
Current law authorizes a county clerk to set fees for shipping and
handling of license plates. The bill authorizes the county clerk to set fees
for the shipping and handling of motor vehicle documents. The county
clerk is required to set and publish the fee by October 15 for registration
periods beginning January 1 of the following year.
Current law allows people to register vehicles for less than one
year so that each of their vehicles expire on the same month. The bill
removes the multiple-vehicle requirement to allow people to register a
vehicle for less than one year for any reason.
Current law requires a salvage vehicle's title to have a brand that
says rebuilt from salvage. The bill requires this brand to include a
disclosure statement, which must:
  • Include the reason the vehicle is salvage, as listed in
statute;
  • Contain a statement from the owner stating the nature of
the damage that resulted in the determination that the
vehicle is a salvage vehicle; and
  • Contain the signature of the seller and buyer to sell the
salvage vehicle.
Current law requires the seller of a salvage vehicle to provide a
disclosure statement of the fact and have it signed. And if the buyer does
not know about the vehicle being rebuilt from salvage, the buyer is
entitled to a refund. The bill requires this disclosure statement and the
buyer to be provided the refund only if the title of a salvage vehicle does
not have the brand on the title or the vehicle is subject to multiple
assignments.
Current law provides the option to have a rebuilder's certificate of
title when a motor vehicle is a collector's item, the applicant is unable to
provide appropriate evidence of ownership, and the applicant posts a
bond. The bill authorizes the department to issue a rebuilder's certificate
of title to people who can prove ownership. Under the current process, 2
bonds may be required. The bill changes the process to require only one
bond.
1

Committee Reports
with Amendments
Full Text
Full Text of Bill (pdf) (most recent)
Fiscal Notes Fiscal Notes (03/12/2025) (most recent)  
Additional Bill Documents Bill Documents
Including:
  • Past bill versions
  • Past fiscal notes
  • Committee activity and documents
  • Bill History
 
Lobbyists Lobbyists
Audio [This feature is available by subscription.]  
Votes House and Senate Votes
Vote Totals Vote Totals by Party
 
 
 
Copyright © 2008-2025 State Capitol Watch