Colorado Springs: Officials' Financial Disclosures & Gifts

General Governance and Administration Colorado 4 Minutes Read · published February 08, 2026 Flag of Colorado

In Colorado Springs, Colorado, elected officials and certain appointed officials must follow municipal rules on disclosing financial interests and gifts to avoid conflicts of interest and to promote transparency. This guide explains who must file, what must be reported, filing deadlines, enforcement pathways, and how to get official forms or make a complaint. For primary authority and filing contacts see the city sources cited below.[1][2]

Who Must File and What to Disclose

The municipal disclosure system typically covers elected officials, candidates for municipal office, and some appointed board or commission members. Disclosures commonly require listing sources of income, business affiliations, real property holdings within the city, and gifts over a monetary threshold. Specific thresholds, covered offices, and lookback periods are set in the municipal code or administrative rules cited below.

Check the City Clerk page for current filing lists and thresholds.

Filing Rules, Deadlines and Public Access

Rules set which form to use, when to file (annual, on taking office, when leaving office, and candidate filing), and whether filings are public records. Deadlines and whether electronic submission is permitted depend on the City Clerk's procedures.

  • Who files: elected officials, designated appointees, and candidates (see official instructions).
  • When to file: on assuming office, annually, and on termination or candidacy filing—check city deadlines.
  • What to disclose: income sources, business interests, real property, and reportable gifts above the city threshold.
  • Public access: filings are maintained as public records by the City Clerk unless law provides otherwise.

Penalties & Enforcement

Municipal code provisions define enforcement, penalties, and appeal rights for failures to file or inaccurate disclosures. Where the city code or clerk pages specify fines, they are listed; where amounts or escalation are not stated explicitly on the cited pages, the text notes that.

  • Monetary fines: not specified on the cited page.
  • Escalation: first, repeat, or continuing offence ranges not specified on the cited page.
  • Non-monetary sanctions: corrective orders, requirements to amend filings, administrative referrals, or civil enforcement may apply; specific remedies not fully itemized on the cited page.
  • Enforcer and complaint pathway: the City Clerk's Office administers filings and receives complaints; enforcement referrals may go to the City Attorney or Municipal Court as appropriate.
    City Clerk contact and filing information.[2]
  • Appeals/review: appeal or review procedures and time limits are not fully specified on the cited filing page; review routes often involve administrative review or municipal court processes.
  • Defences/discretion: some limited exceptions or de minimis gift rules may apply; the exact exemptions are set in the municipal rules or code.
If a penalty amount matters for your situation, request the City Clerk's written guidance.

Applications & Forms

The city publishes official disclosure forms or instructions where available. If no form is published on the city's public filing page, contact the City Clerk to request the correct form or electronic filing method.

  • Official form name/number: not specified on the cited page; contact the City Clerk to obtain the current Statement of Financial Interests or equivalent.
  • Fees: none specified for filing on the cited page.
  • Submission: typically to the City Clerk in person, by mail, or via an official electronic portal if provided.

Action steps: obtain the current form from the City Clerk, complete all sections fully, submit by the stated deadline, and keep a copy of the filed form for your records.

Common Violations

  • Late or missed annual filings.
  • Failure to report a reportable gift or income source.
  • Incomplete or unsigned disclosure forms.
Keep dated proof of submission to avoid disputes about timeliness.

FAQ

Who must file a financial disclosure in Colorado Springs?
Elected officials, many candidates for municipal office, and designated appointees must file as set out by municipal rules; check the City Clerk for the exact list.
What counts as a reportable gift?
Gifts above the municipal threshold must be reported; the exact dollar threshold and exceptions are posted by the City Clerk or in the municipal code.
What happens if I miss a filing deadline?
Late filing may trigger administrative or enforcement actions; specific fines or escalation steps are not specified on the cited filing page, so contact the City Clerk promptly.

How-To

  1. Find the correct form on the City Clerk page or request it by phone or email.
  2. Complete the form fully, including all income, business interests, real estate, and reportable gifts.
  3. Submit by the deadline in person, by mail, or via the City's electronic portal if available.
  4. Keep a dated copy and verify the City Clerk has accepted your filing.
  5. If you receive a notice of deficiency or penalty, follow the appeal instructions or contact the City Clerk for next steps.

Key Takeaways

  • File timely: deadlines include on assumption of office, annually, and at termination or candidate filing.
  • Report fully: include income, business ties, real property, and reportable gifts above thresholds.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] Colorado Springs Municipal Code - Code of Ordinances
  2. [2] City of Colorado Springs - City Clerk filing and contact page