If you want to open DoorDash in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Get the federal and Colorado setup in place before launch, including the entity, EIN if needed, and the real self-employment baseline instead of guessing a seller-permit path.
- Decide whether you are launching in the simple statewide lane or inside Denver or on DEN airport property, because that adds a real local follow-up branch.
- Open and verify your DoorDash Dasher account, complete identity verification, and confirm the age, transportation mode, and payout method that actually fit your plan.
- Launch only after payout, mileage and tax records, insurance reality, and any Denver or airport-property follow-up branch are understood.
Practical first-launch recommendation
If you are testing casually and staying in the ordinary solo Dasher lane, sole proprietor can work.
If you intend to build a durable long-term delivery business, separate the work financially, or add later complexity, single-member LLC is usually the better long-term path.
For beginners, the easiest trustworthy launch lane is still ordinary restaurant delivery with one person, one account, and no airport-heavy or regulated-delivery branch.
Avoid these first-launch mistakes
- Assuming a seller permit is the first filing for a Dasher
- Using a public business name without filing the right county, city, or state name document
- Mixing personal and business money
Colorado-specific friction
Denver is the sharper local branch because the home-business page says a home-address business needs a zoning permit for a home occupation, the licensing index narrows the lane away from an assumed city courier license, and the city-tax FAQ keeps a separate local boundary visible.
- Denver is the sharper local branch because the home-business page says a home-address business needs a zoning permit for a home occupation, the licensing index narrows the lane away from an assumed city courier license, and the city-tax FAQ keeps a separate local boundary visible.
- Airport-property work at DEN remains retained follow-up. Airport-owned pages agree on Island 5 pickup geometry but still split the dropoff answer between Level 6 rideshare language and Level 5 commercial-ground-transport language, and that contradiction should not be overread as default DoorDash airport permission.
- Safest beginner reading: treat Denver and DEN as expansion branches, not as day-one facts you can solve from one city FAQ or one airport rideshare page.
DoorDash-specific friction
DoorDash's public age language is state-sensitive and should be checked live.
- DoorDash's public age language is state-sensitive and should be checked live.
- Payout branding still drifts across Fast Pay, DoorDash Crimson, and older wording.
- DoorDash's broad public safety posture is easier to verify than the exact current insurance-help wording.
- Shop & Deliver, alcohol, and Tasks should not be treated as universal day-one features.
Insurance reality
Do not assume your personal carrier is fine with delivery use just because DoorDash has public safety and insurance language.
- Do not assume your personal carrier is fine with delivery use just because DoorDash has public safety and insurance language.
- Do not treat one public DoorDash help title as a complete description of the current coverage trigger, limits, or exclusions.