Flagship channel-state reference guide

Start DoorDash in Colorado: full reference guide

Use this page when you want the complete dense version: all sections, all appendices, and the full official source directory in one scrollable reference surface.

Last verified: April 29, 2026 Reference mode Dense appendix

Built from reviewed public pages for Colorado, IRS, FinCEN, Denver, DoorDash. Use it as a first-pass guide, then verify the official links that match your setup.

How to use this page

Dense appendix modeFull source directory attachedLast verified April 29, 2026

This version favors completeness over pacing. Use it when you need the appendix, the dense source trail, or the full long-form reference in one place.

Best reading order

  1. Use the fast-answer and official-links sections first if you only need the main route and source trail.
  2. Open the entity, setup, tax, and local sections only where your exact launch path actually branches.
  3. Use the full source directory last as the appendix, not the starting point, unless you already know the exact agency task.

Reference mode

Everything in one dense page

The guided journey is the easier starting point. This page keeps the full accordion guide and source appendix when you want the complete research-backed reference view.

Best when you need

  • The full section map in one scroll without the lighter journey framing.
  • The appendix and official-source directory preserved next to the answer sections.
  • A clearer audit trail before you print, compare, or cross-check another route.

Still better handled in the journey

  • First-pass reading when you want the shortest, safest beginner route.
  • Deciding what to do first before you need the full appendix.
  • Switching states or platforms quickly without reading the full dense version.
Reference map
Start here Fast answer If you want to open DoorDash in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order: Everyone 5 steps

If you want to open DoorDash in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:

  1. Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. Open and verify your DoorDash Dasher account, complete identity verification, and confirm the age, transportation mode, and payout method that actually fit your plan.
  5. 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.
Checklist Quick-start checklist Use the research-backed checklist groups before you spend, before your first sale, and before launch goes live. Everyone 3 groups

Do these before you spend money

  • Pick your entity.
  • Pick your business base: ordinary statewide lane or a sharper Denver / airport-property lane.
  • Stay in the lowest-friction first lane: ordinary restaurant delivery, not alcohol, Shop & Deliver, airport-heavy work, or DoorDash Tasks on day one.
  • Confirm the work is not blocked by lease terms, building rules, parking limits, or home-based business restrictions.
  • Do not assume seller permits, resale certificates, or retail inventory rules belong in the ordinary Dasher lane unless your actual facts change.

Do these before your first paid delivery

  • Form the business or file the local trade-name record if needed.
  • Get an EIN from the IRS if applicable.
  • Open a dedicated business bank account.
  • Close the self-employment, tax-recordkeeping, and mileage-tracking baseline.
  • Review the Denver branch before relying on a simple statewide answer if your real operating base is there.
  • Create your Dasher account, complete verification, and choose your payout setup.

Do these before launch goes live

  • Confirm the transportation mode actually works in your market.
  • Set up weekly payout and, if you want it, the optional Fast Pay or DoorDash Crimson branch.
  • Build a mileage, fees, and tax-recordkeeping routine from day one.
  • Treat airport-property work at DEN as a separate follow-up branch rather than a default beginner lane.
Choose your setup Entity choice Compare the sole-proprietor and single-member LLC paths before banking, tax setup, and platform onboarding. Everyone 2 options

Sole proprietor

Best for: Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.

What it means

  • Colorado's reviewed public sources did not identify a separate entity-formation filing for a sole proprietor using the owner's legal name. If you use another public name, the same-state Colorado baseline routes that through the Secretary of State trade-name path.
  • Business income generally runs through your personal return unless facts change the tax treatment.
  • You usually do not get a liability shield.

Why someone chooses it

  • Faster launch
  • Lower up-front filing cost
  • Fewer entity maintenance steps

Main downside: Personal liability

single-member LLC

Best for: Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business.

What it means

  • Colorado LLC formation uses Articles of Organization through the Secretary of State with a public $50 filing fee. If the LLC uses another public name, keep the trade-name branch separate with the public $20 filing and $5 renewal posture from the approved same-state baseline.
  • Keep the Colorado Periodic Report visible with the public $25 filing fee, plus the published late-fee and cure structure if it drifts.
  • Federal tax treatment usually stays simple unless you elect something else, but that does not erase state maintenance or local follow-up.

Why someone chooses it

  • Liability protection
  • Cleaner setup for banking, bookkeeping, and later hiring
  • Better fit if you expect to scale or add another business line later

Main downside: Higher setup friction and cost than a sole proprietorship

Main path What to do in order The full end-to-end setup path, kept in the same order as the researched guide. Everyone 14 steps
  1. Step 1: Choose a low-risk launch model

    Main guide step 1

    For a first launch, stay inside the safest lane:

    • one personally managed account
    • ordinary restaurant delivery
    • one vehicle, bike, scooter, or other transportation mode that already fits your market
    • outside the sharpest Denver or DEN branch if you want the cleanest beginner lane
    • no storefront, inventory, resale, or seller-permit assumptions
  2. Step 2: Choose your name and public identity

    Main guide step 2

    You need to decide whether you are operating under your own legal name, using a trade name, dashing as a sole proprietor, or using an LLC name that may differ from the public-facing name. Your Dasher profile does not replace legal registration details.

  3. Step 3: Form the business

    Main guide step 3

    If you choose sole proprietor: Colorado's reviewed public sources did not identify a separate entity-formation filing for a sole proprietor using the owner's legal name. If you use another public name, the same-state Colorado baseline routes that through the Secretary of State trade-name path.

    • If you choose sole proprietor: Colorado's reviewed public sources did not identify a separate entity-formation filing for a sole proprietor using the owner's legal name. If you use another public name, the same-state Colorado baseline routes that through the Secretary of State trade-name path.
    • If you choose single-member LLC: Colorado LLC formation uses Articles of Organization through the Secretary of State with a public $50 filing fee. If the LLC uses another public name, keep the trade-name branch separate with the public $20 filing and $5 renewal posture from the approved same-state baseline.
    • If you choose single-member LLC: Keep the Colorado Periodic Report visible with the public $25 filing fee, plus the published late-fee and cure structure if it drifts.
    • If you choose single-member LLC: Keep public-name or assumed-name filing separate from the legal formation filing if the public brand name differs.
  4. Step 4: Get your EIN

    Main guide step 4

    Use the IRS EIN application if applicable. For many LLCs this is required. For many sole proprietors it is optional but still useful for banking, tax paperwork, and keeping your Social Security number off more business documents.

  5. Step 5: Open banking and bookkeeping

    Main guide step 5

    Do this right away:

    • Open a business checking account.
    • Use one account and one card for business only.
    • Save every weekly payout statement, transfer receipt, mileage record, parking charge, toll, bag purchase, phone cost, and support adjustment.
    • Build a tax folder and a compliance folder from day one.
  6. Step 6: Handle the state tax and self-employment baseline

    Main guide step 6

    The reviewed official Colorado record does not identify a default seller-registration, resale, or driver-side permit branch for the ordinary solo Dasher lane.

    • The reviewed official Colorado record does not identify a default seller-registration, resale, or driver-side permit branch for the ordinary solo Dasher lane.
    • Colorado Department of Revenue's own sales-tax-license and DR 0100 pages frame the retail-license branch around direct taxable retail sales and licensed-retailer filing, which is why this packet keeps those pages as boundary markers rather than importing them as default ordinary-Dasher setup.
    • Treat the founder baseline as federal self-employment tax, records, and any Denver home-business or local-tax follow-up instead of storefront registration.
    • Do not import marketplace-seller or retail inventory assumptions unless the business later changes into direct taxable sales of goods.
  7. Step 7: Check local permits, city rules, and home-business limits

    Main guide step 7

    Denver is the sharper local branch because the city's home-business page says that using your home address as the business address requires a zoning permit for a home occupation and separately routes some businesses into the licensing site.

    • Denver is the sharper local branch because the city's home-business page says that using your home address as the business address requires a zoning permit for a home occupation and separately routes some businesses into the licensing site.
    • Denver's licensing center narrows the ordinary Dasher lane because it says that if your business type is not on the city's licensing website, the city cannot issue a license for that business type.
    • Denver's business-tax FAQ keeps a separate local tax boundary visible, but the ordinary Dasher lane in this packet is not being widened into a default retailer-license or seller-permit branch from that page alone.
    • Practical routing rule: if the actual operating base is in Denver, close the home-business and local-tax branch directly instead of relying on the simple statewide lane alone. Start by clearing the home-occupation zoning permit the city says is required for a home-address business, use the licensing index as a narrowing screen, and keep the business-tax FAQ as a separate city-tax boundary instead of guessing that one city answer settles all three.
    • Approval-safe reading for this packet: the ordinary Colorado DoorDash beginner lane is source-backed when the founder stays in the simple statewide lane, routes a real Denver address into direct city closeout, and keeps repeated DEN property work out of the day-one launch plan.
    • Airport-property work remains retained follow-up. Airport-owned DEN pages agree that ride-share pickups use Island 5, but the current airport-owned record still splits designated departing-passenger dropoff between Level 6 rideshare FAQ language and Level 5 commercial-ground-transport language, so DoorDash courier assumptions stay action-dated rather than flattened into airport certainty.
    • Safest airport reading: treat the live Level 5 versus Level 6 conflict itself as the boundary. Do not build an ordinary DoorDash launch plan around repeated DEN property work until the airport-owned record harmonizes or publishes a courier-specific rule.
  8. Step 8: If you hire employees, handle payroll registrations and insurance

    Main guide step 8

    If you do not hire anyone yet, skip this for now.

    • If employees are added later, Colorado opens a real unemployment-account branch through CDLE and MyBizColorado.
    • Quarterly wage-detail reports and monthly employment data run through MyUI Employer+ and stay on the last-day-of-the-next-month cadence after each quarter.
    • Workers' compensation and FAMLI stay separate from DoorDash's own safety or insurance pages.
  9. Step 9: Create your Dasher account and clear screening

    Main guide step 9

    Have your government-issued ID, phone number, email address, Social Security number, bank account information, and transportation documents ready.

    • Have your government-issued ID, phone number, email address, Social Security number, bank account information, and transportation documents ready.
    • DoorDash's public signup page checked on April 29, 2026 still lists Colorado among the higher-age exception states, so keep the public 19+ gate explicit until the live signup flow says otherwise.
    • DoorDash's public onboarding pages say new Dashers move through signup, identity verification, background-check posture, and payout setup before regular dashing begins.
  10. Step 10: Choose the right DoorDash payout and earnings setup

    Main guide step 10

    Weekly direct deposit is the default public baseline.

    • Weekly direct deposit is the default public baseline.
    • Fast Pay remains a once-per-day optional payout branch with a public $1.99 fee per transfer.
    • DoorDash Crimson remains the no-fee instant-payout branch with deposits after every dash if you are approved and choose it.
    • Keep payout-brand drift explicit because Fast Pay, DoorDash Crimson, and older wording still overlap in DoorDash's public record.
  11. Step 11: Choose the right delivery lane before you expand

    Main guide step 11

    Start with ordinary restaurant delivery.

    • Start with ordinary restaurant delivery.
    • Add Shop & Deliver only after the basic lane works.
    • Treat alcohol as a later compliance branch.
    • Do not assume DoorDash Tasks exists or works the same way in your market.
  12. Step 12: Treat airport-property work and dense local rules as separate follow-up branches

    Main guide step 12

    Treat DEN airport pages as geometry and property-boundary sources, not as a closed DoorDash courier workflow.

    • Treat DEN airport pages as geometry and property-boundary sources, not as a closed DoorDash courier workflow.
    • Do not treat either side of the current Level 5 versus Level 6 airport-owned dropoff record as proof that an ordinary DoorDash courier may stage, wait, or operate on airport property the same way ride-share or commercial-ground-transport operators do.
    • The stronger local baseline is still Denver's home-occupation, licensing-index, and city-tax record for the actual operating address.
    • Denver still deserves a separate local review layer when the operating address, tax facts, or home-business posture actually point there, and the current Level 5 versus Level 6 airport-owned mismatch should stay explicit until the airport record harmonizes.
    • That bounded DEN contradiction is an airport-property caveat, not a reason to invent a statewide Colorado filing branch or deny the ordinary non-airport launch path.
    • Practical reading: a real Denver home base should be cleared through zoning first, licensing second, and city-tax review third; a real DEN-heavy operating plan should be deferred unless the founder is ready to live with an explicit airport-property caveat.
  13. Step 13: Insurance reality check

    Main guide step 13

    Do not treat DoorDash's broad public safety pages as a substitute for confirming the current insurance wording and your own carrier's position.

    • Do not treat DoorDash's broad public safety pages as a substitute for confirming the current insurance wording and your own carrier's position.
    • Re-check the live help flow before relying on any one static article title or older screenshot for occupational-accident or auto-insurance posture.
  14. Step 14: Launch with a compliance-first operating routine

    Main guide step 14

    Once live, keep these habits:

    • reconcile payouts, fees, and reimbursements
    • keep tax reserves separate
    • monitor support adjustments and account-health issues
    • re-check local and airport branches before you scale into them

Best practical order for the LLC launch path

  1. Decide whether you are truly staying in the ordinary solo Dasher lane.
  2. Choose the legal name and file the LLC if you want one.
  3. Add the public-name branch only if the public operating name differs from the legal LLC name.
  4. Get the EIN.
  5. Open the bank account.
  6. Calendar the recurring state maintenance branch and organize mileage, parking, and tax tracking.
  7. Check whether the actual business base creates a sharper Denver local branch.
  8. Build the Dasher account and complete verification.
  9. Confirm transportation-mode and insurance fit.
  10. Choose your payout setup.
  11. Add airport-property work near DEN only after the ordinary local lane is stable.
State filing and tax Colorado tax stack Keep the Colorado registration, tax, and maintenance rules together while you launch. Everyone 8 checks

1. EIN

A typical single-member LLC should get an EIN early.

  • A typical single-member LLC should get an EIN early.
  • A sole proprietor may not always need one federally, but it is often practical anyway.

2. Colorado sales tax, seller permit, or equivalent registration

The reviewed official Colorado record does not identify a default seller-registration, resale, or driver-side permit branch for the ordinary solo Dasher lane.

  • The reviewed official Colorado record does not identify a default seller-registration, resale, or driver-side permit branch for the ordinary solo Dasher lane.
  • Colorado Department of Revenue's retail-license pages use MyBizColorado, CR 0100, the standard retail license, and DR 0100 for direct taxable retail sales and licensed-retailer filing cadence.
  • Because this packet keeps the ordinary DoorDash courier lane separate from direct taxable retail sales, those Department of Revenue pages are being used here as boundary markers rather than as default Dasher startup steps.
  • Treat the founder baseline as federal self-employment tax, records, and any Denver home-business or local-tax follow-up instead of storefront registration.
  • Do not import marketplace-seller or retail inventory assumptions unless the business later changes into direct taxable sales of goods.

3. No resale or storefront branch in this baseline

No resale certificate, inventory registration, or seller-permit branch belongs in the ordinary solo Dasher setup described here.

  • No resale certificate, inventory registration, or seller-permit branch belongs in the ordinary solo Dasher setup described here.
  • If the founder later adds direct retail sales, inventory, or another business line, reopen the tax analysis instead of importing seller logic into this pack.

4. Estimated-tax and self-employment branch

The clean baseline here is quarterly planning, mileage records, and good bookkeeping rather than wage withholding.

  • The clean baseline here is quarterly planning, mileage records, and good bookkeeping rather than wage withholding.
  • This is especially important because DoorDash payout, safety, and tax-help wording can move faster than the state legal record.

5. Denver and local tax branch

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.
  • Keep local address, tax, and zoning questions separate from the ordinary statewide courier lane.
  • For a real Denver operating address, use the home-business page first and clear the zoning-permit requirement the city ties to a home-address business, then use the licensing index second and the city-tax FAQ third instead of pretending a single city page closes all three branches.
  • Approval-safe reading for this packet: if the founder is outside Denver and not building the plan around DEN property, the ordinary Colorado Dasher lane remains intact; if the real base is in Denver, close zoning first, licensing second, and city tax third while keeping DEN separate.

6. Entity tax treatment

A standard single-member LLC is generally disregarded for federal income-tax purposes unless it elects another classification.

  • A standard single-member LLC is generally disregarded for federal income-tax purposes unless it elects another classification.
  • State entity maintenance still remains real even when the federal tax treatment stays simple.

7. Entity filing-fee, annual-report, or franchise-tax rule

Keep the Colorado Periodic Report visible with the public $25 filing fee, plus the published late-fee and cure structure if it drifts.

  • Keep the Colorado Periodic Report visible with the public $25 filing fee, plus the published late-fee and cure structure if it drifts.
  • Do not stop at the one-time formation filing and assume the state is done with you.

8. If the founder changes entity type, geography, or operating model later

Re-check the bank account, EIN, local rules, insurance profile, payout setup, and tax posture if you move from sole proprietor to LLC.

  • Re-check the bank account, EIN, local rules, insurance profile, payout setup, and tax posture if you move from sole proprietor to LLC.
  • Re-check the whole branch if you move into Denver or start relying on airport-property deliveries near DEN.
  • Re-check the whole branch if the business adds employees, direct retail sales, or another platform with different local treatment.
Platform setup DoorDash account and operations Use this section for the DoorDash-specific account, plan, eligibility, and operations work. Everyone 5 steps
  1. Step 9: Create your Dasher account and clear screening

    Platform step 1

    Have your government-issued ID, phone number, email address, Social Security number, bank account information, and transportation documents ready.

    • Have your government-issued ID, phone number, email address, Social Security number, bank account information, and transportation documents ready.
    • DoorDash's public signup page checked on April 29, 2026 still lists Colorado among the higher-age exception states, so keep the public 19+ gate explicit until the live signup flow says otherwise.
    • DoorDash's public onboarding pages say new Dashers move through signup, identity verification, background-check posture, and payout setup before regular dashing begins.
  2. Step 10: Choose the right DoorDash payout and earnings setup

    Platform step 2

    Weekly direct deposit is the default public baseline.

    • Weekly direct deposit is the default public baseline.
    • Fast Pay remains a once-per-day optional payout branch with a public $1.99 fee per transfer.
    • DoorDash Crimson remains the no-fee instant-payout branch with deposits after every dash if you are approved and choose it.
    • Keep payout-brand drift explicit because Fast Pay, DoorDash Crimson, and older wording still overlap in DoorDash's public record.
  3. Step 11: Choose the right delivery lane before you expand

    Platform step 3

    Start with ordinary restaurant delivery.

    • Start with ordinary restaurant delivery.
    • Add Shop & Deliver only after the basic lane works.
    • Treat alcohol as a later compliance branch.
    • Do not assume DoorDash Tasks exists or works the same way in your market.
  4. Step 12: Treat airport-property work and dense local rules as separate follow-up branches

    Platform step 4

    Treat DEN airport pages as geometry and property-boundary sources, not as a closed DoorDash courier workflow.

    • Treat DEN airport pages as geometry and property-boundary sources, not as a closed DoorDash courier workflow.
    • Do not treat either side of the current Level 5 versus Level 6 airport-owned dropoff record as proof that an ordinary DoorDash courier may stage, wait, or operate on airport property the same way ride-share or commercial-ground-transport operators do.
    • The stronger local baseline is still Denver's home-occupation, licensing-index, and city-tax record for the actual operating address.
    • Denver still deserves a separate local review layer when the operating address, tax facts, or home-business posture actually point there, and the current Level 5 versus Level 6 airport-owned mismatch should stay explicit until the airport record harmonizes.
    • That bounded DEN contradiction is an airport-property caveat, not a reason to invent a statewide Colorado filing branch or deny the ordinary non-airport launch path.
    • Practical reading: a real Denver home base should be cleared through zoning first, licensing second, and city-tax review third; a real DEN-heavy operating plan should be deferred unless the founder is ready to live with an explicit airport-property caveat.
  5. Step 13: Insurance reality check

    Platform step 5

    Do not treat DoorDash's broad public safety pages as a substitute for confirming the current insurance wording and your own carrier's position.

    • Do not treat DoorDash's broad public safety pages as a substitute for confirming the current insurance wording and your own carrier's position.
    • Re-check the live help flow before relying on any one static article title or older screenshot for occupational-accident or auto-insurance posture.
Local branch Local permits and Denver branch These local and city checks can still change the answer even after the state and platform path is clear. Location-specific 2 branches

Local permits and location checks

Colorado still pushes many address-based business questions down to local governments even when the ordinary solo Dasher lane stays cleaner than a storefront or retail pack.

  • Colorado still pushes many address-based business questions down to local governments even when the ordinary solo Dasher lane stays cleaner than a storefront or retail pack.
  • For any place where the business will operate:
  • check local business-license, zoning, home-business, or tax questions tied to the actual address,
  • route a real Denver operating address into the city appendix instead of treating it as the same thing as the statewide lane,
  • keep those city questions separate from the ordinary statewide courier lane,
  • clear the home-occupation zoning-permit and city-tax sequence directly when the residence is the real business base,
  • keep airport-property access separate from city licensing,
  • reopen the DEN branch before relying on curbside, staging, parking, or repeated airport-property deliveries,
  • and reopen the analysis if the work starts looking more like repeated airport-property work, warehousing, or visible commercial operations at the residence.

Denver Appendix

If the business operates in Denver, add one more review layer.

  • If the business operates in Denver, add one more review layer.
  • Denver's home-business page says that using your home address as the business address requires a zoning permit for a home occupation, which makes the home-base branch much more concrete than a generic local caveat.
  • Denver's licensing pages narrow the local branch because the city says it cannot issue a license for a business type that is not on its licensing site, which cuts against assuming an automatic local courier license.
  • Denver's business-tax FAQ keeps the local tax and retailer-license boundary visible for real Denver operating addresses even though the ordinary Dasher lane is not being treated as a default retail seller path.
  • Repeated airport-property deliveries at DEN stay a separate follow-up branch. Airport-owned pages agree that ride-share pickups use Island 5, but the airport-owned dropoff record still splits between Level 6 rideshare FAQ language and Level 5 facilities and commercial-ground-transport language, so DoorDash courier access should stay action-dated instead of guessed.
  • Practical reading for this packet: a real Denver operating base should be routed into direct city closeout instead of being treated as the same thing as the simple statewide baseline. Start by clearing the home-occupation zoning permit the city ties to a home-address business, use the licensing index as a narrowing screen, and keep the business-tax FAQ as a separate city-tax boundary.
  • Approval-safe reading: treat the DEN mismatch as a bounded airport caveat, not as a reason to overstate statewide uncertainty. The ordinary non-airport Dasher lane can still be approved while Denver and DEN remain explicit follow-up branches.
  • Safest operational reading: if the founder wants the lowest-friction beginner lane, avoid relying on an unresolved Denver home-base answer or on airport-property assumptions at DEN until the local and airport branches are cleared directly. Treat the live Level 5 versus Level 6 conflict as a reason not to overread any single airport page as DoorDash authorization.
  • Airport-property work remains retained follow-up. Airport-owned DEN pages agree that ride-share pickups use Island 5, but the current airport-owned record still splits designated departing-passenger dropoff between Level 6 rideshare FAQ language and Level 5 commercial-ground-transport language, so DoorDash courier assumptions stay action-dated rather than flattened into airport certainty.
Optional branch Employees and insurance Use this branch if you plan to hire or need the insurance follow-up that comes with scaling. Only if hiring or scaling 5 branches

1. Employer registration

If employees are added later, Colorado opens a real unemployment-account branch through CDLE and MyBizColorado.

  • If employees are added later, Colorado opens a real unemployment-account branch through CDLE and MyBizColorado.
  • Quarterly wage-detail reports and monthly employment data run through MyUI Employer+ and stay on the last-day-of-the-next-month cadence after each quarter.

2. Wage reports and new hires

Quarterly wage-detail reports and monthly employment data run through MyUI Employer+ and stay on the last-day-of-the-next-month cadence after each quarter.

  • Quarterly wage-detail reports and monthly employment data run through MyUI Employer+ and stay on the last-day-of-the-next-month cadence after each quarter.

3. Workers' compensation and related coverage

Workers' compensation and FAMLI stay separate from DoorDash's own safety or insurance pages.

  • Workers' compensation and FAMLI stay separate from DoorDash's own safety or insurance pages.

4. Keep employer coverage separate from DoorDash safety language

DoorDash's public safety and insurance-help posture does not replace payroll, workers' compensation, or local employer obligations once staff are hired.

  • DoorDash's public safety and insurance-help posture does not replace payroll, workers' compensation, or local employer obligations once staff are hired.

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.
Stay compliant Ongoing compliance calendar Keep the recurring compliance checks and live-operating routine visible after launch. Everyone 4 groups

Before first dash

  • Finish entity or DBA setup.
  • Get EIN if applicable.
  • Open bank account.
  • Build the tax and mileage tracker.
  • Check the sharper city or airport-property branch if your facts point there.
  • Complete DoorDash verification and choose a payout method.

Monthly

  • Save weekly payout records.
  • Reconcile fees and adjustments.
  • Review tax reserves.
  • Keep local or airport-property branches visible if the work is drifting in that direction.

Quarterly

  • Make estimated tax payments if required.
  • Re-check any city or local compliance branch that depends on volume, address use, or staffing.

Annual or periodic

  • Keep the Colorado Periodic Report visible with the public $25 filing fee, plus the published late-fee and cure structure if it drifts.
  • Re-check live DoorDash payout, insurance, and tax-document pages before relying on older screenshots or older help articles.
  • Re-check federal reporting status before you form or restructure the entity.
Avoid these Common mistakes These are the repeated beginner errors called out in the research pack. Everyone 6 mistakes

Common Mistakes New Dashers Make

  • 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
  • Treating Fast Pay, DoorDash Crimson, or Tasks as fixed universal features
  • Treating public DoorDash safety pages as a substitute for confirming insurance reality
  • Flattening local city or airport-property follow-up into a generic statewide answer

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.

Full appendix Full official source directory Every official source row from the research pack, kept in its full table structure. Everyone 37 rows

Source group

Statewide Start

Colorado Secretary of State / MyBizColorado

State startup hub

Form / portal State business services
Fee None for the page
Timing First planning step
Who needs it Everyone

Use as the statewide business-records start point alongside approved same-state Colorado packets.

Open official link

Colorado Secretary of State

Formation and filing hub

Form / portal Online business filings
Fee Varies by filing
Timing Before launch
Who needs it Filing entities

Approved same-state Colorado packets use the Secretary of State filing system for formation and trade-name work.

Open official link

City and County of Denver

Local business guidance

Form / portal Home-business guidance
Fee Varies by permit path
Timing Early planning if based in Denver
Who needs it Denver-based founders

Keep the local home-business branch visible early because it is one of the sharper same-state Colorado deltas.

Open official link

Source group

Entity Choice and Formation

Colorado Secretary of State

LLC formation filing

Form / portal Articles of Organization
Fee $50
Timing At formation
Who needs it single-member LLC founders

Same-state approved Colorado packets use this as the default LLC formation branch.

Open official link

Source group

Sole Proprietor and Local Name Filings

Colorado Secretary of State

Trade-name branch

Form / portal Trade Name Statement
Fee $20
Timing Before using a business name
Who needs it Sole proprietors and LLCs using another public name

Approved same-state Colorado packets use the online trade-name filing with $5 renewal.

Open official link

Source group

Federal and State Tax Setup

IRS

EIN overview and online application

Form / portal Online EIN application
Fee Free
Timing Early in setup
Who needs it LLCs, employers, and founders wanting cleaner banking

Use the direct IRS path only.

Open official link

IRS

Self-employment tax and recordkeeping hub

Form / portal Self-Employed Individuals Tax Center
Fee None for the page
Timing Early setup and ongoing recordkeeping
Who needs it Sole proprietors and disregarded LLC owners

Federal hub keeps estimated-tax, recordkeeping, and self-employment-tax branches explicit for a founder-run Dasher lane.

Open official link

Colorado Department of Revenue

Direct-retail tax license boundary

Form / portal MyBizColorado or CR 0100
Fee License fee varies by start date; as of April 29, 2026, one-location standard retail license starting January-June 2026 is $16
Timing Before direct taxable retail sales
Who needs it Businesses that actually need a Colorado sales-tax license

Colorado says the license is for state and state-administered local taxes and expires at the end of each odd-numbered year. This DoorDash packet uses that page as the official boundary marker for direct retail sales, not as a default ordinary-Dasher filing step.

Open official link

Colorado Department of Revenue

Standard retail license instructions

Form / portal Standard retail sales-tax license
Fee $16 plus $50 deposit for the first retail location in the January-June 2026 window
Timing During retail-license registration
Who needs it Direct retail sellers

Colorado says the standard retail license also covers wholesale sales for a business that does both. Keep that retail-license posture separate from the ordinary DoorDash courier lane in this packet.

Open official link

Colorado Department of Revenue

Licensed-retailer filing cadence boundary

Form / portal DR 0100 retail sales-tax return
Fee None for the page
Timing Ongoing after retail licensing
Who needs it Licensed retailers

Colorado says retailers must file a sales-tax return for every filing period even if no sales were made. Use this as the filing-cadence boundary if the founder later opens a true retail-sales lane.

Open official link

Source group

Entity Tax Maintenance

Colorado Secretary of State

Periodic Report

Form / portal Periodic Report
Fee $25 online, $50 late fee, $100 cure fee
Timing Recurring annual maintenance
Who needs it single-member LLC founders

Approved same-state Colorado packets keep the recurring Periodic Report branch explicit.

Open official link

Source group

Federal Reporting

FinCEN

Federal reporting status

Form / portal Interim Final Rule Q&A
Fee None
Timing Check before filing
Who needs it Everyone forming an entity

As of April 29, 2026, domestic entities are exempt from BOI reporting under the public interim-final-rule guidance.

Open official link

FinCEN

Federal reporting status page

Form / portal BOI reporting status page
Fee None
Timing Check before filing
Who needs it Everyone forming an entity

Public FinCEN status page keeps the current domestic-entity exemption visible and is a good second-source check when the Q&A language changes.

Open official link

Source group

Employees, Payroll, and Insurance

Colorado Department of Labor and Employment

New employer checklist and unemployment-account setup

Form / portal New Employer Checklist and MyBizColorado routing
Fee None for the page
Timing Before first covered payroll
Who needs it Businesses hiring employees

CDLE uses the checklist to route employers to unemployment-account setup when wages are being paid to employees in Colorado.

Open official link

Colorado Department of Labor and Employment

Quarterly wage detail reports and monthly employment data

Form / portal MyUI Employer+ wage reporting
Fee Premiums vary
Timing Quarterly
Who needs it Employers with unemployment liability

Official page says quarterly wage detail reports, monthly employment data, and premium payments are due on the last day of the month following the quarter.

Open official link

Colorado Department of Labor and Employment

Workers' compensation insurance requirements

Form / portal Workers' compensation insurance guidance
Fee Premium varies
Timing Before first covered employee and continuously afterward
Who needs it Employers with one or more employees in Colorado

Official page says employers with one or more employees working in Colorado must maintain workers' compensation coverage at all times.

Open official link

Source group

Platform Setup

DoorDash

Public signup page

Form / portal Dasher signup flow
Fee No public signup fee identified
Timing Before launch
Who needs it All prospective Dashers

Public signup page checked on April 29, 2026 says Dashers generally must be 18 or older, while the same page still lists higher-age exception states separately. Treat the live page as the same-day source before relying on screenshots.

Open official link

DoorDash

Getting-started guidance

Form / portal Getting Started with DoorDash as a New Dasher
Fee None for the page
Timing During onboarding
Who needs it New Dashers

Public page routes new Dashers to app videos, support, signup-status checks, and common setup issues.

Open official link

DoorDash

Identity verification and screening posture

Form / portal Public safety and identity article
Fee None for the page
Timing Before launch
Who needs it Prospective Dashers

DoorDash says prospective Dashers verify a valid government ID and complete a background-check branch using Social Security number details.

Open official link

DoorDash

Dasher pay overview

Form / portal Dasher Pay
Fee No monthly plan fee identified
Timing Before launch and ongoing
Who needs it Active Dashers

Current public pay page says Dashers can use Earn per Offer and, where available, Earn by Time, keep 100% of customer tips, receive weekly direct deposit, use Fast Pay for a $1.99 fee per transfer, or switch to DoorDash Crimson for no-fee instant payouts.

Open official link

DoorDash

DoorDash Crimson payout account

Form / portal DoorDash Crimson
Fee No monthly account fee stated on the public page
Timing During setup and ongoing
Who needs it U.S. Dashers using Crimson

Current public page says approved Dashers can receive no-fee deposits after every dash, use a virtual card right away, and manage the account inside the Dasher app.

Open official link

DoorDash

DoorDash Crimson onboarding details

Form / portal Crimson onboarding article
Fee Transfer or optional feature fees vary
Timing During setup and ongoing
Who needs it Dashers comparing payout methods

Public April 8, 2026 article says Crimson can provide a virtual card, external-bank linking, direct-deposit features, and account-routing details inside the app. Keep payout-brand drift explicit because public pages still overlap with Fast Pay and older wording.

Open official link

DoorDash

Tax-document posture

Form / portal Public tax article
Fee None for the page
Timing Before tax season
Who needs it Dashers filing taxes

Public March 18, 2024 article still says Dashers are self-employed, DoorDash does not withhold taxes from delivery payments, and 1099 delivery has run through Stripe when the threshold is met. Re-check live tax-help pages on the action date.

Open official link

Source group

Fulfillment, Logistics, and Delivery Operations

DoorDash

Local delivery work overview

Form / portal Driving Opportunities
Fee None for the page
Timing Before launch
Who needs it Prospective Dashers

Public page explains the flexible courier model and transport-mode options. Use it as the baseline ordinary restaurant-delivery lane instead of assuming grocery, alcohol, or Tasks are universal day-one features.

Open official link

DoorDash

First-dash onboarding

Form / portal What to Expect on a First Dash
Fee None for the page
Timing Before first dash
Who needs it New Dashers

Public January 16, 2024 article describes the basic accept, pick up, and drop off workflow and keeps the beginner lane centered on ordinary restaurant delivery.

Open official link

DoorDash

Shop & Deliver branch

Form / portal Shop & Deliver overview
Fee None for the page
Timing Optional later branch
Who needs it Dashers adding shopping orders

Public page says Shop & Deliver uses the Red Card and a different shop-pay-deliver workflow. Keep it as an expansion branch instead of the default beginner lane.

Open official link

DoorDash

Alcohol-delivery safety branch

Form / portal Public safety article
Fee None for the page
Timing Optional later branch
Who needs it Dashers accepting alcohol orders

DoorDash says alcohol orders can require in-app ID scanning and responsible-handoff steps. Treat this as a later compliance branch rather than a default launch assumption.

Open official link

DoorDash

Dasher support portal

Form / portal Support portal
Fee None for the page
Timing Ongoing
Who needs it Active Dashers

Use this when a live account issue, tax-document issue, insurance question, or payout issue cannot be solved from public pages.

Open official link

Source group

Insurance Checkpoint

DoorDash

Public safety and support layer

Form / portal Safety With DoorDash
Fee None for the page
Timing Before first dash and ongoing
Who needs it All Dashers

Public safety page describes in-app safety tools, SafeDash, and a 24/7 Trust and Safety line.

Open official link

DoorDash Help

Auto-insurance and occupational-accident help branch

Form / portal Support portal and help search
Fee None for the page
Timing Before first dash and at each renewal
Who needs it Car-based Dashers

Dedicated public help articles for auto insurance and occupational-accident coverage exist, but the exact public wording is not stable enough to treat it as a fully closed universal answer. Re-check the live help flow or in-app screens on the action date.

Open official link

Source group

Denver And Airport Branch

City and County of Denver

Home-business zoning permit

Form / portal Home occupation zoning permit
Fee Varies by permit path
Timing If the operating address is in Denver
Who needs it Denver-based home businesses

Denver says that if you intend on doing business from your home and using your home address as a business address, you must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation; the same page also says some businesses separately require a business license and routes founders to the city business index.

Open official link

City and County of Denver

Business licensing index boundary

Form / portal Business Licensing Center contact page
Fee None for the page
Timing During local license review
Who needs it Denver-based businesses

The city says that if you do not see your type of business on its licensing website, it cannot issue a license for that business type.

Open official link

City and County of Denver

City tax or permit warning

Form / portal Denver business-tax FAQ
Fee No license fee currently charged for the biannual retailer's license
Timing If business is in Denver
Who needs it Denver-based businesses

Use this as the third-step city-tax closeout after zoning and licensing review. Do not widen it into an automatic retailer-license filing for every Denver-based Dasher, but do keep it explicit when the real operating base is in Denver.

Open official link

Denver International Airport

Airport branch start point

Form / portal Airport website
Fee Varies by live airport rules
Timing Before relying on airport-property deliveries
Who needs it Dashers considering DEN-area work

Use this as the official airport start point while the exact DoorDash courier-access answer remains open.

Open official link

Denver International Airport

Official airport ride-share pickup and dropoff geometry

Form / portal Ride-share page
Fee None for the page
Timing Before relying on airport-property deliveries
Who needs it Dashers considering DEN-area work

Current airport-owned page says pickups use Island 5 and the designated departing-passenger dropoff area is on Level 6 of the Jeppesen Terminal, which sharpens one side of the current airport-owned dropoff conflict. Treat it as geometry only, not as proof that an ordinary DoorDash courier may use the same airport workflow.

Open official link

Denver International Airport

Terminal levels and commercial-ground-transport layout

Form / portal Airport facilities and grounds
Fee None for the page
Timing During airport closeout
Who needs it Dashers considering DEN-area work

Current airport-owned facilities page says Level 5 includes ride-share and commercial-ground-transport use while departures are on Level 6, which is why airport-property delivery assumptions should stay action-dated instead of flattened into certainty. Treat the page as a no-overread boundary source, not as a tie-breaker that closes DoorDash courier access.

Open official link

Denver International Airport

Current Level 5 commercial-ground-transport operations

Form / portal March 26, 2026 safety release
Fee None for the page
Timing During airport closeout and contradiction review
Who needs it Dashers considering DEN-area work

The airport's March 26, 2026 release still describes active Level 5 Commercial Ground Transportation drop-off and pick-up operations, which keeps the Level 5 side of the airport-owned record live in 2026. Treat it as a conservative property-control source, not as proof that an ordinary DoorDash courier is authorized to use that same airport flow.

Open official link

Source group

Retained Follow-Up