State guide
Colorado business requirements guide
Built from the approved Colorado platform-and-state research packs. Use the family comparison and platform overlay before you act.
State guide map
One statewide answer first, then the matching lane, then the local branch that can still change what you do.
Best reading order
- Read the Colorado statewide baseline first so the filing and tax order stays anchored to one state answer.
- Use the family comparison before you spend money, then open the matching platform overlay only when that lane changes the answer.
- Treat city, county, home-based, and product-specific rules as a separate final pass instead of flattening them into the statewide answer.
Why trust this page
This Colorado page is synthesized from approved combo guides across storefront, marketplace-seller, platform-work, and hosting lanes. Use the official links on the page to verify local requirements before you act.
- The Accountant (State-family rollout reviewer assigned)
- Accountable state-surface reviewer
- Launch-state guides, official source directory state bundles, and scenario inheritance.
State baseline What stays true in Colorado
Across the approved Colorado research packs, the shared baseline is to choose your setup lane first, finish the federal and state registrations that actually apply, verify local permission-to-operate questions separately, and only then complete the platform-specific launch work. The family comparison below matters because storefront, marketplace, platform-work, and hosting lanes do not share the same tax, insurance, or operations branch.
Best practical order
- Choose whether the Colorado launch belongs in storefront, marketplace-seller, platform-work, or hosting first.
- Choose the legal setup and public-facing name before paying for filing or onboarding help.
- Get the EIN if your lane or banking setup needs it.
- Open the business bank account and separate personal money early.
- Register for the Colorado tax accounts that actually apply to your lane.
- Verify county, city, zoning, airport, or short-term-rental branches separately.
- Finish the platform-specific onboarding, payments, tax settings, or operating checks.
- Launch only after the official links and the ongoing compliance calendar are both mapped.
Compare by family How the answer changes by family
Use this comparison before you spend money. The approved research packs show that storefront, marketplace, platform-work, and hosting lanes do not share the same tax, insurance, local-rule, or operations branch.
Storefront lanes keep more of the state setup, tax settings, payments, shipping, and policy work on you. Use the state baseline first, then treat storefront launch tasks as a separate readiness branch instead of a replacement for filings or local checks.
- Do not treat a direct storefront like a marketplace-only tax shortcut; the direct-sale lane usually keeps more registration and tax-setting work on you.
- Store payments, checkout, tax settings, shipping settings, domains, and policy pages are launch tasks, not substitutes for state registration.
- Public-name filing, local storage, home-based, zoning, and carrier-traffic rules can still matter when you operate or ship from home.
- Inventory, fulfillment, and return workflows stay your responsibility even when a third-party service or warehouse helps later.
- Run a real test checkout before going live so the state baseline and storefront setup stay aligned.
Marketplace-seller lanes still start with the state baseline, but marketplace collection, fulfillment, shipping, payout, and resale branches vary by platform. Separate account approval and operations from the state registration and local-rule questions.
- Do not assume marketplace tax collection answers every state-registration, resale, or direct-sales question.
- Keep fulfillment separate: some marketplace lanes use seller-managed shipping, while others offer platform-fulfillment options or warehouse programs.
- Inventory-for-resale setups may still need resale-certificate or supplier follow-up where the approved research says it applies.
- If inventory, equipment, vehicles, or other business personal property stays in-state, keep any local asset-tax or business-personal-property branch separate from marketplace collection.
- Marketplace approval, product restrictions, payment holds, and reserve rules are platform-specific and happen after the state baseline is clear.
- Local storage, home-based, zoning, or permit questions can still survive even when customer discovery happens through a marketplace.
Platform-work lanes usually run through self-employment, worker-status, payout, insurance, vehicle, and local operating branches instead of a storefront or resale branch. Keep platform onboarding separate from the government and local questions.
- Do not assume storefront or seller-permit logic applies by default; many platform-work lanes turn on worker-status, self-employment tax, or insurance questions instead.
- Platform onboarding is separate from government registration, local permission-to-operate, and airport or city operating branches.
- Vehicle, transport mode, airport, parking, and home-base rules can matter depending on the platform and municipality.
- Mileage, payouts, and tax records need their own routine before you go live.
- If you hire help, add vehicles, or expand beyond solo work, payroll and workers’ compensation thresholds can change the answer.
Colorado hosting keeps the short-term-rental, lodging-tax, direct-booking, and local-permission branch visible. Use the state baseline first, then open the hosting overlay before you pay for listing, furnishing, or permit help.
- Confirm the property can legally and contractually be used for short-term lodging before you list it.
- Close the Colorado tax and registration branch before you assume your hosting platform solved it.
- If the property is in Denver, clear the city short-term-rental, zoning, and lodger's-tax branch before listing.
- Direct bookings can change tax, permit, payout, and insurance responsibilities.
- Emergency contact, turnover, house-rule, and guest-operations planning belong in launch readiness, not as an afterthought.
Platform overlay
Airbnb in Colorado: what changes
If you want to host on Airbnb in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Confirm the property can legally and contractually be used for short-term lodging before you list it.
- Close the Colorado tax and registration branch before you assume Airbnb solved it.
- If the property is in Denver, clear the city short-term-rental, zoning, and lodger's-tax branch before listing.
- Complete Airbnb listing setup, payout setup, tax-information setup, and host-side safety rules only after the government-side path is ready.
- Treating Airbnb onboarding as if it closes the Colorado and Denver permission-to-host branch.
- Assuming the Colorado marketplace-facilitator FAQ cleanly overrides the lodging-specific Colorado DOR sales-tax-license page.
- Assuming a real Denver address works the same way as the statewide baseline.
- Treating a non-primary-residence Denver listing as a small variation on the ordinary city path.
- Mixing direct bookings or off-platform fees into an Airbnb-only tax reading without reopening the state branch.
- Treating DEN traffic-control or airport-property pages as if they were host-authorization answers.
- Colorado does not collapse every host question into one statewide permit answer.
- For any place where the host will operate:
- check the exact city or county permit and zoning answer,
- keep occupancy, parking, signage, and home-occupation questions separate from Airbnb onboarding,
- keep landlord, deed, HOA, and condo restrictions separate from government permission-to-host rules,
- and avoid flattening a city-specific host lane into the statewide baseline.
- Important city-tax warning:
- Do not treat a state-collected or platform-collected tax answer as if it automatically closes a home-rule city tax branch. Denver is the main example in this packet.
- If the host base or real property is in Denver, add one more review layer.
- The reviewed city record closes these points strongly enough for a beginner guide:
- the property must be the host's primary residence,
- owners and long-term renters with landlord permission may apply,
- the current fee stack is a $50 application fee plus a $100 annual license fee,
- initial review can take up to 30 days and specialist review can take up to 90 days,
- only one booking party may stay in the short-term rental at a time,
- and the platform or the host must maintain at least $1,000,000 in liability coverage for property damage and bodily injury.
- The city branch also keeps these items explicit:
- the Denver Lodger's Tax ID,
- the local 10.75% lodger's-tax branch,
- the city rule that even if you only use Airbnb and lodger's taxes are collected, you still must submit required city filings on time and renew the tax account every odd year,
- and zoning or home-business review if the home address is being used as the business address.
- Practical effect:
- For an ordinary Denver launch, do not list first and ask later.
- Close the city short-term-rental, tax, and address-specific home-business questions before publishing the listing.
- This is where the city branch stops being ordinary.
- The reviewed city record says:
- a non-primary-residence property is not eligible for the ordinary Denver short-term-rental license,
- the city points operators toward a lodging facility branch instead,
- and the reviewed public lodging-facility materials are framed around 4 or more transient rooms.
- Do not assume a one-unit non-primary-residence Denver listing is covered by the ordinary city path.
- Do not assume the public lodging-facility page fully closes that commercial branch either.
- Keep non-primary-residence Denver hosting as a separate local-commercial follow-up before launch.
- Denver is a stronger local branch than the statewide baseline because it ties together:
- primary-residence eligibility,
- city licensing,
- city lodger's-tax questions,
- and home-business or zoning review tied to the real address.
- That is why this packet keeps Denver explicit instead of flattening it into a generic statewide caveat.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is Airbnb-first short-term lodging host.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is property setup, listing launch, guest-facing rules, and host payout operations.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with party houses, event-space concepts, mixed-channel fee collection, unverified local permit assumptions, and airport-property certainty.
Platform-specific official links
Sole Proprietor and Trade Name Filings
Keep the Colorado trade-name and home-address branch explicit while the Airbnb wave-1 packet is still closing the exact host-specific local answer.
Platform Setup
Airbnb says hosts can create a listing in a few steps and that getting started is free.
Airbnb says every host, new co-host, and booking guest must be identity verified.
Airbnb says hosts may be asked for legal name, date of birth, government ID, and other details, and payouts may be interrupted if information cannot be confirmed.
Airbnb routes hosts through Account settings > Payments > Payouts > Add payout method.
Airbnb says location verification is optional for most listings and has a narrow meaning.
Hosting Operations, Taxes, and Host Policy
Public fee page supports both split-fee and single-fee structures, so do not flatten to one number.
Airbnb says payouts are typically released about 24 hours after check-in and can be delayed up to 45 days after check-in if a review occurs.
Airbnb says eligible U.S. hosts can receive faster payouts by debit or reloadable prepaid card.
Airbnb says it is legally required to collect tax information in certain U.S. cases and can suspend payouts or apply withholding if information is missing.
Public page says 1099-K reporting for calendar year 2025 generally starts above $20,000 and more than 200 transactions, but hosts can still receive other tax forms.
Hosts can set standard house rules and additional rules for the listing.
Airbnb tells hosts to check HOA, lease, landlord, lender, and insurance issues before hosting.
Public host-policy layer requires accuracy, honoring reservations and refunds, timely communication, and cleanliness.
Airbnb says hosts generally may not collect reservation-related fees outside the platform unless expressly authorized, but some tax collection exceptions remain.
Insurance Checkpoint
Airbnb says it includes guest identity verification, reservation screening, up to $3 million host damage protection, and up to $1 million host liability insurance.
Airbnb says host damage protection does not take the place of homeowners or renters insurance and recommends reviewing your own coverage.
Airbnb says to pay and communicate on Airbnb and to make sure you are covered.
DEN Airport-Property Branch
Use this as the official airport start point while the exact ordinary host answer remains open.
DEN says its real-estate division supports commercial development of the airport's non-aviation land and highlights hospitality as one of the compatible business sectors. This supports keeping airport-owned-property activity in a separate commercial-development branch rather than treating it as ordinary home sharing.
Current airport-owned page says pickups use Island 5 and the designated departing-passenger dropoff area is on Level 6 of the Jeppesen Terminal. Treat it as geometry only, not as proof that an ordinary Airbnb host closes an airport-property branch.
Denver Branch
Denver says short-term rentals are rentals for 1 to 29 days and require a license in the host's primary residence. The same page says initial review can take up to 30 days and specialist review can take up to 90 days.
Denver says property owners and long-term renters with landlord permission may apply at their primary residence, short-term rental hosts cannot rent simultaneously to more than one party, and short-term-rental licensees must pay lodger's tax, occupational privilege tax, and any other applicable taxes or fees.
Denver tells applicants to verify at least $1 million of platform or personal liability coverage, identify a local responsible party, prepare the required renter brochure, and register for a lodger's tax account. The same page also says that even if you only use Airbnb and lodger's taxes are collected, you must submit required filings on time and renew the tax account every odd year.
Denver says lodging of fewer than 30 days is subject to the city's 10.75% lodger's tax and routes short-term-rental operators to the Treasury registration path. This is a separate home-rule city branch from the state-administered taxes discussed on the Colorado DOR pages.
Denver describes a lodging facility as a hotel, lodging house, rooming house, or other place where transients receive accommodations and 4 or more rooms are rented. Use this as an edge-branch boundary, not as proof that a one-unit non-primary-residence Airbnb concept is already closed.
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. Keep this separate from the short-term-rental license and city-tax branches.
Amazon FBA in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open Amazon FBA in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Put the federal and Colorado registrations in place before launch, especially the Colorado sales-tax and local home-rule branch.
- Verify local city rules, including home-business, local sales-tax, and zoning questions where you operate.
- Open and verify your Amazon seller account, then enroll in FBA if that is your fulfillment path.
- Launch only after your sourcing, resale, product-eligibility, inventory-prep, and tax setup are ready.
- Assuming a Colorado state sales-tax license solves every local tax question
- Assuming Amazon's marketplace collection replaces every state or local registration branch
- Using a business name before filing the Colorado trade name
- Mixing personal and business money
- Launching with regulated or high-risk products too early
- Keeping weak supplier or compliance documentation
- Missing the Colorado LLC periodic-report cycle
- Treating Amazon as the compliance department
- Colorado pushes many real-world licensing, tax, and location questions down to cities and self-collected local tax offices.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check MyBizColorado,
- check city or county business offices,
- check local zoning or planning offices,
- check whether the city is self-collected for sales tax,
- and check whether a local home-business or local tax registration applies.
- Typical local risk areas:
- self-collected home-rule sales-tax licensing
- home occupation permits
- zoning for storage
- commercial deliveries at a residence
- building or fire-code triggers
- lease, HOA, or deed restrictions
- If the business operates in Denver, add one more review layer.
- Denver says that if you intend to do business from home and use your home address as a business address, you must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
- Denver says that any business located in Denver, even one operating from a residence, that makes retail sales of tangible personal property or certain services needs a Denver sales-tax license.
- Denver says it no longer charges a license fee with the biannual Retailer's Sales, Use, Lodgers Tax License.
- Denver also says businesses located in Denver can still have Denver use-tax registration obligations even where a Denver sales-tax license is not the right fit.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is marketplace seller.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is FBA.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products.
Platform-specific official links
Platform Setup
Amazon's public guide lists the registration steps and baseline documents.
Pricing re-checked on April 27, 2026.
Amazon's public page says Brand Registry is free and requires a pending or registered trademark.
Fulfillment, Logistics, or Store Operations
Public FBA overview explains the Amazon-run fulfillment model.
Amazon says some categories are open, some require approval, some require a Professional plan, and some cannot be sold by third-party sellers.
Public Amazon article identifies Send to Amazon as the shipment-creation workflow to use for inbound inventory.
Insurance Checkpoint
Public materials cite the USD 10,000 monthly gross-sales trigger and USD 1,000,000 liability threshold, but the live agreement should still be re-checked on the action date.
Denver Branch
Denver says a home-based business using the home address as its business address must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
Denver says a business located in Denver that makes retail sales needs a Denver sales-tax license, even if the business operates from a residence.
Denver's business-tax information page confirms the current no-fee note for the biannual retailer's license and routes users to tax forms and e-services.
DoorDash in Colorado: what changes
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.
- 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
- 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.
- 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.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is platform-based delivery courier.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is Dasher onboarding and delivery operations.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with inventory resale assumptions, seller-permit assumptions unless state rules explicitly require them, airport-property certainty, regulated-delivery shortcuts, and storefront setup.
Platform-specific official links
Platform Setup
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.
Public page routes new Dashers to app videos, support, signup-status checks, and common setup issues.
DoorDash says prospective Dashers verify a valid government ID and complete a background-check branch using Social Security number details.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Fulfillment, Logistics, and Delivery Operations
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.
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.
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.
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.
Use this when a live account issue, tax-document issue, insurance question, or payout issue cannot be solved from public pages.
Insurance Checkpoint
Public safety page describes in-app safety tools, SafeDash, and a 24/7 Trust and Safety line.
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.
Denver And Airport Branch
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.
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.
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.
Use this as the official airport start point while the exact DoorDash courier-access answer remains open.
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.
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.
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.
Retained Follow-Up
eBay in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open eBay in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Get your federal and Colorado registrations or registration decision in place before launch, especially the marketplace-only versus direct-sales tax branch.
- Verify city and county rules, including self-collected home-rule sales-tax, zoning, and Denver home-business requirements where you operate.
- Open and verify your eBay seller account, complete the live checks eBay requires, and build a small first set of listings.
- Launch only after your product, tax, shipping, and compliance setup are ready.
- Assuming marketplace-only logic clears the whole Colorado tax picture without checking direct-sales or home-rule city branches
- Forgetting the Denver home-occupation or local sales-tax-license branch
- Using a public-facing name without the Colorado trade-name filing
- Treating resale sourcing as solved before re-checking Colorado's actual current document path
- Expanding into direct sales or local pickup without re-checking self-collected city rules
- Pricing inventory without a fresh copy of the live eBay fee model
- Mixing personal and business money
- Colorado pushes many real-world licensing, tax, and location questions down to cities and self-collected local tax offices.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check MyBizColorado,
- check city or county business offices,
- check local zoning or planning offices,
- check whether the city is self-collected for sales tax,
- and check whether a local home-business or local tax registration applies.
- Typical local risk areas:
- self-collected home-rule sales-tax licensing
- home occupation permits
- zoning for storage
- commercial deliveries at a residence
- building or fire-code triggers
- lease, HOA, or deed restrictions
- If the business operates in Denver, add one more review layer.
- Denver says that if you intend to do business from home and use your home address as a business address, you must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
- Denver says that any business located in Denver, even one operating from a residence, that makes retail sales of tangible personal property or certain services needs a Denver sales-tax license.
- Denver says it no longer charges a license fee with the biannual Retailer's Sales, Use, Lodgers Tax License.
- Denver also says businesses located in Denver can still have Denver use-tax registration obligations even where a Denver sales-tax license is not the right fit.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is marketplace seller.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is seller-managed shipping.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products.
Platform-specific official links
Platform Setup
The reviewed local repo evidence did not preserve one settled public onboarding guide for this wave, so use the current eBay-owned public domains as the action-date starting point.
No source-backed local-repo fee snapshot was preserved for this wave, so the live eBay fee model remains an explicit re-check item instead of a guessed fact.
Keep legal name, address, bank, and tax details aligned with real-world documents because the exact live verification and payout steps were not preserved in local repo evidence for this pass.
No mandatory public eBay brand-enrollment program was identified in the reviewed local repo evidence used for this packet.
Fulfillment, Logistics, or Store Operations
Use the beginner-safe seller-managed shipping baseline for the first launch instead of importing Amazon inbound or Shopify storefront assumptions.
The reviewed local repo evidence did not preserve one reusable eBay restricted-items baseline, so regulated, branded, hazardous, luxury, age-restricted, and child-use products still need live policy verification.
Build one or two accurate listings first, keep handling time and returns terms realistic, and use tracked shipping whenever possible.
Insurance Checkpoint
No public eBay-wide insurance threshold or mandatory coverage amount was preserved in the reviewed local repo evidence for this packet, so keep the live seller terms and outside contracts as required action-date checks.
Denver Branch
Denver says a home-based business using the home address as its business address must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
Denver says a business located in Denver that makes retail sales needs a Denver sales-tax license, even if the business operates from a residence.
Denver's business-tax information page confirms the current no-fee note for the biannual retailer's license and routes users to tax forms and e-services.
Etsy in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open Etsy in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose an Etsy-eligible product lane and your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Get your federal and Colorado registrations in place before launch, especially the marketplace-only versus direct-sales tax branch.
- Verify local city rules, including self-collected home-rule sales-tax, zoning, and Denver home-business requirements where you operate.
- Open and verify your Etsy shop, payment account, and first listing setup.
- Launch only after your product, tax, local, and seller-managed shipping setup is ready.
- Assuming Etsy's marketplace tax collection replaces every Colorado or local registration branch
- Treating self-collected home-rule city questions like a footnote
- Using a business name before filing the Colorado trade name when it is required
- Mixing personal and business money
- Launching with restricted or poorly documented items too early
- Pricing listings without accounting for Etsy's full fee stack
- Ignoring the Colorado LLC Periodic Report cycle
- Treating Etsy as the compliance department
- Colorado pushes many real-world licensing, tax, and location questions down to cities and self-collected local tax offices.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check MyBizColorado,
- check city or county business offices,
- check local zoning or planning offices,
- check whether the city is self-collected for sales tax,
- and check whether a local home-business or local tax registration applies.
- Typical local risk areas:
- self-collected home-rule sales-tax licensing
- home occupation permits
- zoning for storage
- commercial deliveries at a residence
- building or fire-code triggers
- lease, HOA, or deed restrictions
- If the business operates in Denver, add one more review layer.
- Denver says that if you intend to do business from home and use your home address as a business address, you must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
- Denver says that any business located in Denver, even one operating from a residence, that makes retail sales of tangible personal property or certain services needs a Denver sales-tax license.
- Denver says it no longer charges a license fee with the biannual Retailer's Sales, Use, Lodgers Tax License.
- Denver also says businesses located in Denver can still have Denver use-tax registration obligations even where a Denver sales-tax license is not the right fit.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is marketplace seller.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is seller-managed shipping.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products.
Platform-specific official links
Platform Setup
Etsy says sellers start at Etsy.com/sell, use a desktop browser to set up the shop, and complete required two-factor authentication. Etsy also says it does not require a business license, but sellers must follow applicable law.
New shops enroll in Etsy Payments as part of opening the shop. Etsy says sellers must be in an eligible country to open a new shop.
Etsy says sellers choose whether they are using Etsy Payments as an individual or a business for legal and tax purposes.
Etsy says it partners with Persona; the name on the ID must match the name on the bank account you shared.
Etsy says U.S. sellers verify through Plaid or manual test deposits. The page says sellers signing up must verify before opening the shop, and existing sellers can be suspended if they do not verify a changed bank account in time.
Etsy says missed legal deadlines can block payouts and place the shop into Etsy-initiated vacation mode until the required information is confirmed.
Main public fee source. Re-check the live set-up-fee display during onboarding because Etsy says the amount varies by location.
Etsy says the fee varies by country and is in addition to the transaction fee.
Optional monthly subscription; not required for a normal U.S. shop launch.
Etsy does not have an Amazon-style brand registry requirement for sellers. The reviewed public record supports Etsy's Reporting Portal and IP policy as the relevant optional enforcement tools instead.
Fulfillment, Logistics, or Store Operations
Etsy says sellers must register as a seller before creating a listing and that the item must fit Etsy's handmade, vintage, or craft-supply categories.
Etsy says missing storefront basics like a shop icon can affect visibility in search.
Etsy says sellers outside the EU must set a return policy whenever they edit or create a physical-item listing, even if the policy says no returns or exchanges are accepted.
Items must be made, designed, handpicked, or sourced by the seller and still comply with the Prohibited Items Policy.
Etsy says drop shipping is generally not allowed except for limited craft-and-party-supplies cases; production partners are allowed for original designs with disclosure.
Etsy says sellers are responsible for ensuring orders are sent to buyers even when using a third party to help with fulfillment.
Optional label tool; can affect shipping workflow and some performance programs.
Reserve timing and percentages vary by account; treat the existence of reserves as real but the exact reserve terms as account-specific.
Etsy says qualifying orders up to $250 may be covered, but the program is not insurance and sellers still need accurate processing, shipping, and listing practices.
Pair this page with the help article because the public help page already announces updates beginning May 7, 2026, and the legal policy is the stronger source when operational details matter.
Insurance Checkpoint
Some label services include coverage and additional coverage may be available.
No public Etsy-wide seller insurance threshold was identified in the reviewed public record. Etsy Purchase Protection is not a substitute for general liability or product liability insurance.
Denver Branch
Denver says a home-based business using the home address as its business address must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
Denver says a business located in Denver that makes retail sales needs a Denver sales-tax license, even if the business operates from a residence.
Denver's business-tax information page confirms the current no-fee note for the biannual retailer's license and routes users to tax forms and e-services.
Facebook Marketplace in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open Facebook Marketplace in Colorado, you usually need to do six things in order:
- Decide whether your first sales will be local meetup or off-platform payment or shipped checkout on Facebook if your account is eligible.
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Run the Colorado marketplace-only vs direct-sales vs resale vs home-rule analysis that matches your actual selling lane before you assume you do or do not need a state sales-tax license.
- Check local city and county rules, especially the Denver home-business, sales-tax, and no-home-pickup zoning branch if you will operate there.
- Set up your listing, verification, payout, shipping, and policy flow on Facebook Marketplace.
- Launch only after your product, tax, local, and platform setup are all ready.
- Assuming a Colorado seller can ignore state sales-tax licensing just because a marketplace platform sometimes collects tax in a different branch.
- Treating local cash, off-platform payment, and shipped checkout on Facebook as the same legal and operational lane.
- Treating Denver home-business, zoning, and no-home-pickup limits as optional when operating from a residential Denver address.
- Assuming your real Facebook account will definitely have shipping, checkout, payout, or protection features just because public help pages describe them.
- Buying inventory for resale before you have settled the actual Colorado license and resale-document posture that matches your sales lane.
- Treating Facebook Marketplace like a dedicated business-storefront program and ignoring Meta's public warning that business listings can still be blocked or removed.
- Colorado pushes many real-world licensing, tax, and location questions down to cities and self-collected local tax offices.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check MyBizColorado,
- check city or county business offices,
- check local zoning or planning offices,
- check whether the city is self-collected for sales tax,
- and check whether a local home-business or local tax registration applies.
- Typical local risk areas:
- home occupation permits
- inventory storage
- recurring buyer pickups
- delivery traffic at a residence
- city or county business licensing
- self-collected local sales tax
- local use tax
- If the business operates in Denver, add one more review layer.
- Denver says if you intend to do business from your home and use your home address as a business address, you must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
- Denver says Online Retail Sales are allowed as a home occupation only if the transaction originates on and is completed via an individual website or third-party online marketplace, and those sales cannot include transferring goods directly to a buyer at the residential premises.
- Denver also says home-occupation permissions depend on the actual zoning code and zone district, so address-specific review still matters.
- Denver says a business located in the city that makes retail sales needs a Denver sales-tax license even if it operates from a residence.
- Denver says a business that does not require a Denver sales-tax license may still need a Denver consumer use-tax account if it uses, stores, distributes, or consumes taxable tangible personal property, products, or services in the city.
- Local caution:
- If the founder plans regular buyer pickups at home in Denver, do not assume that a Facebook Marketplace listing alone makes that zoning-safe.
- If the founder is outside Denver, do not assume the Denver branch answers the exact local office or tax question for another Colorado city.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is marketplace seller.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is local sale or seller-managed shipping.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with services, food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products.
Platform-specific official links
Sole Proprietor and Name Filings
Colorado requires a trade name when an individual is not using the individual's legal first and last name to conduct business in Colorado.
Public filing page shows the filing fee and filing type directly.
Platform Setup
Public page says Marketplace is for adults, uses the seller's main profile, and says businesses may be blocked or have listings removed.
Public page shows the Item for sale listing flow.
Public page says a seller may also be able to offer shipping depending on where they live.
Public page says buyers pay securely on Facebook and the seller ships directly to the buyer.
Public page says shipping and prepaid-label features are not available to all users and lists acceptable ID, address, and SSN or ITIN proof.
Public page preserves that shipped-checkout payouts use a Meta-managed payment flow; do not assume one universal payout rail beyond the public pages you re-check on the action date.
Public page references 1099-K, 1099-MISC, and payment-processor tax reporting.
Public page says the selling fee applies to the full transaction amount including shipping and applicable taxes.
Marketplace listings must comply with Commerce Policies and Community Standards.
Fulfillment, Logistics, and Operations
Public page says shipping is not available to all users and that Cancellation Rate should stay below 10%.
Public page confirms an own label flow exists, but do not assume it carries the same seller-protection treatment as Meta-generated labels.
Public page says Facebook does not offer returns or refunds for local pickup purchases.
Public page says the card issuer decides chargeback outcomes and that disputed amounts are deducted from pending payouts during review.
Public page says Marketplace listings must comply with Meta's Commerce Policies and Community Standards, and Marketplace is for physical products, not services.
Public page preserves the in-person safety and suspicious-activity warning posture for local deals.
Insurance Checkpoint
No public universal seller liability-insurance requirement was identified in the reviewed public Meta pages on April 29, 2026.
Denver Branch
Denver says a home-based business using the home address as a business address must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
Denver says Online Retail Sales as a home occupation cannot include transferring goods directly to a buyer at the residential premises.
Denver says a business located in Denver that makes retail sales needs a Denver sales-tax license even if operating from a residence.
Denver's business-tax information page routes users to tax forms, e-services, and voluntary-disclosure help.
Facebook Marketplace Tax, Checkout, and Responsibility Notes
Public English-language Meta page says local Marketplace sales through an individual seller are between the buyer and seller. This is one reason the Colorado pack keeps local meetup separate from shipped-checkout assumptions.
Public page says buyers pay securely on Facebook and the seller ships directly to the buyer.
Public page says seller protection is currently available only in the US and limited to eligible items with a sale price of $2,000 or less.
Public page says Facebook does not provide returns or refunds for local pickup purchases.
Public page references 1099-K, 1099-MISC, and payment-processor reporting.
Public page says the card issuer decides the outcome and that a buyer-win result deducts the disputed amount and chargeback fee.
Instacart in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open Instacart 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 Instacart shopper 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.
- Assuming a seller permit is the first filing for a shopper
- Using a public business name without filing the right county, city, or state name document
- Mixing personal and business money
- Treating payout options or specialty-batch rules as fixed universal features
- Waiting until tax season or after a support issue to find the login-gated tax-document or claim path
- Treating public Instacart safety pages or injury-protection language as a substitute for confirming insurance reality
- Flattening local city or airport-property follow-up into a generic statewide answer
- Colorado still pushes many address-based business questions down to local governments even when the ordinary solo shopper 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 shopper 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.
- 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 shopper license.
- Denver's business-tax FAQ keeps the local tax and retailer-license boundary visible for real Denver operating addresses even though the ordinary shopper 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 Instacart shopper 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 shopper 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 Instacart authorization.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is platform-based grocery shopper or delivery contractor.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is shopper onboarding and batch operations.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with inventory resale assumptions, seller-permit assumptions unless state rules explicitly require them, storefront setup, and airport-property certainty.
Platform-specific official links
Platform Setup
Public page reviewed on April 29, 2026 says some shoppers can start shopping in as soon as 1 hour in certain areas.
Public February 4, 2025 article says shoppers must be 18+, hold a valid driver's license and Social Security number, pass criminal and motor-vehicle-record background checks, and complete photo or identity verification.
Public terms say shopper services are subject to an independent contractor agreement unless the app is used in the course of employment.
Public page reviewed on April 29, 2026 describes batch pay, promotions, and tips, says shoppers keep 100% of customer tips, and says heavy pay on qualifying batches is at least $2.
Public page says weekly direct deposit pays for the prior Monday-Sunday week between Wednesday and Friday and lists instant cashout at $0.50 when that option is available. Re-check the live app for any timing, fee, or eligibility drift before relying on it.
Public page reviewed on April 29, 2026 says eligible shoppers can get fast, free auto-payouts after every batch, says banking services are through Lead Bank, says the program is powered by Branch, and says ATM fees apply after 8 transactions in a month.
Public page explains batch access by location, store proximity, and account standing and says some stores require a physical payment card while alcohol, prescription, bulky-item, and certain heavy-item work can require certifications or opt-ins.
Public page says when, where, and what work you take is up to you.
Fulfillment, Logistics, and Batch Operations
Public page says batches can include shop and deliver, shop-only, and deliver-only work. Use the ordinary full-service shopper lane as the cleanest day-one baseline.
Public page says new shoppers get the highest Cart Star priority for their first 10 batches and are not penalized for not accepting a batch. Keep local-market exceptions action-date checked in the live app.
Public help page links to separate auto and non-auto claim forms. Use it as the cleaner support and incident-routing checkpoint than generic blog summaries.
Public page says shoppers are never expected or required to enter a customer's residence and may decline that request. Keep this support and safety boundary separate from local permit or airport-property questions.
Public terms keep the independent-contractor baseline explicit. Re-check the live help flow or in-app tax-document screens on the action date before approval.
Exact tax-document retrieval steps remain login-gated. Confirm the live path in the real shopper account and do not guess from stale screenshots.
Insurance Checkpoint
Public article explains ongoing identity checks, account-security controls, and deactivation review. Use it as the platform-owned safety baseline rather than as a substitute for personal insurance review.
Public claim form says contractors are responsible for obtaining applicable insurance, including automotive liability, workers' compensation, and other necessary insurance, licenses, and permits.
Public form is a process source, not a blanket coverage guarantee. Keep your own policy review and any live help-page wording in the loop.
Public page says shopper injury protection is available free of charge to all U.S. full-service shoppers, but it does not fully close every Colorado auto-policy interaction.
Public investor-filings hub is the safest public reminder that car-based shoppers should keep their own insurance reality and delivery-use disclosure explicit; the public shopper pages do not close every state-specific policy answer.
Denver And Airport Branch
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.
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.
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 shopper, but do keep it explicit when the real operating base is in Denver.
Use this as the official airport start point while the exact Instacart shopper-access answer remains open.
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 Instacart shopper may use the same airport workflow.
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 Instacart shopper access.
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 Instacart shopper is authorized to use that same airport flow.
Retained Follow-Up
Shopify in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open Shopify in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Get your federal and Colorado registrations in place before direct taxable sales, and keep the public-name branch straight if the storefront name differs from the legal name.
- Verify local permit, zoning, occupancy, storage, and city-tax rules if the business operates from a Denver or other local address.
- Create the Shopify store, complete business details, billing, payments, taxes, shipping, policy pages, checkout, and domain setup.
- Launch only after the product, tax, fulfillment, and compliance setup is ready for a direct storefront rather than a marketplace shortcut.
- flattening Colorado into a generic Shopify handles tax answer,
- using a public-facing storefront name without completing the Colorado trade-name branch when it applies,
- skipping the self-collected home-rule city analysis and assuming the state-administered tax answer covers every city,
- treating Denver home-occupation or retailer-license questions as too local to matter,
- assuming Shopify Tax or Manual Tax defaults are correct without review,
- pricing without plan, payment-processing, shipping, refund, and local tax-compliance costs.
- Colorado pushes many real-world licensing, tax, and location questions down to cities and self-collected local tax offices.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check MyBizColorado,
- check city or county business offices,
- check local zoning or planning offices,
- check whether the city is self-collected for sales tax,
- check whether a local home-business or local tax registration applies,
- ask whether home occupation rules apply,
- ask whether storage or shipment prep changes the zoning answer,
- ask whether commercial deliveries at a residence change the local answer,
- ask whether signage or customer pickup triggers another permit question,
- ask whether building or fire-code review applies,
- check lease, HOA, or deed restrictions,
- keep written answers with the address and date when possible.
- Typical local risk areas:
- self-collected home-rule sales-tax licensing
- home occupation permits
- zoning for storage
- commercial deliveries at a residence
- building or fire-code triggers
- lease, HOA, or deed restrictions
- If the business uses a Denver address, keep the home-occupation permit and Denver retailer-license branches visible, especially if inventory is stored at home.
- Denver and other self-collected / home-rule city branches should stay separate from state-administered Colorado sales-tax guidance.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is DTC ecommerce store.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is self-fulfillment or 3PL.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products.
Platform-specific official links
Platform Setup
Public help checklist for account, business details, taxes, shipping, and store setup.
Use the live pricing page on the action date because plan prices and promotions can change.
Keep country, product, document, bank, and verification eligibility visible instead of assuming every store qualifies automatically.
Standard checkout branding is broader than the deeper Plus-only customization branch; every store gets a myshopify.com domain and Shopify adds SSL automatically when the domain is connected through Shopify.
Use the U.S. requirements page for business type, bank-account, verification, and two-step-authentication checks.
Standard checkout branding is broader than the deeper Plus-only customization branch.
Every store gets a myshopify.com domain and Shopify adds SSL automatically when the domain is connected through Shopify.
Fulfillment, Logistics, or Store Operations
Use this as the launch-prep checklist for business details, taxes, shipping, and store setup.
Shopify says tax remains the merchant's responsibility and the store can use manual settings or Shopify Tax where available.
Merchants still need to configure rates, locations, zones, and fulfillment rather than relying on defaults.
Use these public pages to screen product, business-type, and policy risk before launch.
Insurance Checkpoint
No public Shopify-wide insurance minimum or sales threshold was identified in the reviewed public sources for this first-draft packet.
Denver Branch
Denver says a home-based business using the home address as its business address must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
Denver says a business located in Denver that makes retail sales needs a Denver sales-tax license, even if it operates from a residence.
TikTok Shop in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open TikTok Shop in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC, and line that choice up with the correct TikTok Shop seller type.
- Get your federal and Colorado registrations in place before launch, but keep the marketplace-only versus direct-sales split explicit because it changes the state sales-tax answer.
- Verify local permit, home-rule, zoning, and Denver branches before operating from a real address.
- Open the TikTok Shop seller account, complete W9, payout, warehouse, and shipping setup, and start with a very small first catalog.
- Launch only after your product compliance, fee math, sourcing records, and local operating plan are ready.
- Treating TikTok Shop like a direct Shopify store instead of a marketplace channel
- Assuming the state marketplace-only answer automatically closes the Denver or other home-rule local branch
- Adding direct off-platform sales without reopening the Colorado sales-tax-license question
- Pricing products before checking the live TikTok Shop category fee
- Choosing the wrong TikTok Shop seller type for the real business setup
- Handing vendors resale paperwork from memory even though Colorado's ordinary retailer workflow is still a conservative re-check item
- Ignoring residential-address, zoning, or shipment-traffic issues because the business is "online only"
- Linking the wrong bank-account type or using a name that does not exactly match onboarding records
- Colorado pushes many real-world licensing, tax, and location questions down to cities and self-collected local tax offices.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check MyBizColorado,
- check city or county business offices,
- check local zoning or planning offices,
- check whether the city is self-collected for sales tax,
- and check whether a local home-business or local tax registration applies
- Typical local risk areas:
- self-collected home-rule sales-tax licensing
- home-occupation permits
- zoning for storage
- commercial deliveries at a residence
- building or fire-code triggers
- lease, HOA, or deed restrictions
- If the business operates in Denver, add one more review layer.
- Denver says that if you intend to do business from home and use your home address as a business address, you must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
- Denver's zoning materials specifically list Online Retail Sales as a home-occupation category, but say the transaction must originate and be completed online and goods cannot be transferred directly to a buyer at the residential premises.
- Denver's tax pages say the city no longer charges a license fee for the biannual Retailer's Sales, Use, Lodgers Tax License.
- Denver's business-tax materials also describe a separate Consumer's Use Tax branch for businesses operating a physical location in Denver that do not collect sales tax.
- Practical Denver rule:
- Do not assume the state marketplace-only answer automatically resolves the local Denver branch.
- If the business is in Denver, keep both the home-occupation and city-tax review open until the local facts are clear.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is marketplace seller.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is seller-managed shipping or marketplace fulfillment where available.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products.
Platform-specific official links
Sole Proprietor and Public Name Filings
Colorado says an individual not using the individual's legal first and last name to conduct business in Colorado is required to file a trade name.
Public filing page shows the filing type and fee directly.
Colorado says state licenses cover only state and state-collected jurisdictions and tells users in home-rule cities to contact the city for its license requirements.
Platform Setup
Public page dated April 23, 2026 says TikTok is a marketplace and buyers purchase directly from the seller.
Main seller entry point.
TikTok publishes separate U.S. signup paths for Individual, Sole Proprietorship, and Corporation or Partnership. The sole-proprietorship page says a sole proprietor without an EIN should select Individual Seller.
Public setup page says sellers complete verification, W9, warehouse setup, product upload, and Official Account linking after business verification.
Public finance guidance says only the shop owner can change bank details and the bank-account holder name must exactly match onboarding identity.
Public pages show category-specific rates plus a temporary 3% new-seller promotion. Re-check the live exact category fee before pricing because the public record is not one evergreen U.S. table.
Fulfillment, Logistics, or Store Operations
Public overview says TikTok Shop offers Seller Shipping, TikTok Shipping, and Fulfilled by TikTok (FBT), depending on eligibility.
Public setup page says TikTok Shipping is the default during setup and requires a valid USPS-verified address.
Public page says the automatic and optional insurance applies to TikTok Shipping labels, not to general seller operations.
Public policies updated in April 2026 cover truthful listings, prohibited products, restricted products, qualification requirements, and enforcement.
Insurance Checkpoint
Public page says CGL is not currently mandatory, may become mandatory later, and the Insurance Center is available only to select sellers.
Denver Branch
Denver says a home-based business using the home address as its business address must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
Denver's zoning page says online retail sales may qualify as a home occupation, but the transaction must originate and be completed online and goods cannot be transferred directly to a buyer at the residence.
Denver says the city no longer charges a license fee for the biannual retailer's license and also describes a separate Consumer's Use Tax branch for businesses using taxable items in Denver without collecting sales tax.
Uber in Colorado: what changes
If you want to drive with Uber in Colorado, the current safest launch order is:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Get your federal setup and your real public-name branch in place before relying on the app.
- Check whether your actual home base creates a Denver local branch and keep that separate from airport rules.
- Complete Uber signup, documents, screening, vehicle, insurance, and payout setup.
- Use ordinary rides first and treat DEN, premium lanes, and formal commercial lanes as separate branches.
- treating this like a storefront or seller-license launch instead of a platform-work launch,
- buying or switching vehicles before checking the live market-eligibility screen,
- assuming a trade-name or LLC filing is the same thing as Uber onboarding,
- mixing Denver local business questions with DEN airport-access questions,
- flattening the DEN public dropoff instructions into one false-certainty answer,
- assuming public Uber payout or fee posture gives a fixed earnings model.
- Colorado still pushes many address-based operating questions down to local governments even when the company-side TNC permit and fee branches stay with the platform.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check local income-tax, home-business, zoning, or occupancy questions that are tied to the actual address,
- check whether using the residence as the business address pushes you into Denver's home-occupation zoning-permit path,
- check whether the city's licensing pages actually list your activity type before assuming a separate local rideshare license exists,
- keep those city questions separate from the ordinary statewide TNC driver lane,
- keep airport access separate from city licensing,
- and reopen the analysis if the work starts looking more like fleet, livery, or repeated home-based pickup operations.
- If the business base is in Denver, add one more local review layer.
- The current packet keeps the Denver home-business and local-tax branch visible rather than pretending statewide TNC rules answer it.
- Denver's own home-business page now makes one piece of the answer concrete: using your home as the business address points toward a home-occupation zoning permit review.
- The remaining question is narrower now: whether the ordinary solo-driver facts trigger anything beyond that zoning and local-tax layer.
- DEN airport operations remain a separate appendix, especially because the current public dropoff guidance is still not perfectly harmonized across the airport-owned FAQ and the platform page.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is platform-based independent driver.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is driver onboarding and trip operations.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with inventory resale assumptions, seller-permit assumptions unless state rules explicitly require them, FBA or storefront setup.
Platform-specific official links
Trip Operations, Worker-Status, and State Boundary
The reviewed official record did not identify a separate driver-side TNC permit or seller-registration branch for the ordinary solo-driver lane; the PUC page points the permit branch at the TNC side.
PUC says it is the primary regulator, that TNCs must be permitted and insured, and that drivers must stay inside the app-based dispatch lane.
Official PUC driver FAQ says drivers apply with the TNC directly, submit a driver's license, proof of auto insurance, and Colorado registration, self-certify fitness, be at least 21, clear background and driving-history review, follow hours-of-service limits, and use an inspected vehicle.
CDLE says the statewide disclosure and deactivation or suspension complaint framework is active and drivers may submit complaints beginning June 1, 2025.
Platform Setup
Stable public Uber baseline for age, experience, and required documents, but live market and action-date re-checks still matter.
Public help explains upload steps, rejection reasons, and review posture.
Public help keeps the background-check process explicit.
Public page gives the broad U.S. baseline, but the live market-eligibility screen still controls.
Seed payout baseline; account-specific fast-payout options still need action-date confirmation.
Public Uber page explains the current broad coverage framework, but state-law and personal-policy fit still need closeout.
Insurance Checkpoint
The enacted summary keeps the logged-on primary-liability coverage rule and the during-ride uninsured-motorist additions explicit, but it still needs to be paired with current platform and airport facts.
Platform page remains useful for broad coverage posture, but it does not replace employer-side workers' compensation, FAMLI, or current airport-heavy insurance review.
Denver And Airport Seed Branch
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.
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, which helps narrow the ordinary solo-driver branch away from an assumed Denver rideshare license.
Same-state approved Colorado packets use this as the main Denver tax branch.
Use this as the official airport start point while the exact rideshare-driver page is still being closed for the final draft.
Action-date recheck on April 29, 2026 confirmed the airport-owned ride-share page still says pickups are on Island 5, says the designated departing-passenger dropoff area is on Level 6 of the Jeppesen Terminal, and says there is no charge for curbside pick-up or drop-off on Level 6, which sharpens one side of the current airport-owned dropoff conflict.
Current airport-owned facilities page says Level 5 includes ride share services and that commercial vehicles, including Uber and Lyft passengers, use Level 5, while departures are on Level 6, which is why the dropoff answer still needs action-date caution even within the airport-owned record.
The airport's current March 26, 2026 release describes work in the Level 5 Commercial Ground Transportation drop-off and pick-up areas, which strengthens the record that Level 5 is still part of the active airport-owned operating geometry in 2026.
Airport-owned press release says ride-app pickup and dropoff moved to Level 5, Island 5 and curbside, which strengthens the record that the current Level 6 FAQ answer conflicts with older airport-owned guidance rather than with only platform pages.
Retained Follow-Up
Walmart Marketplace in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open Walmart Marketplace in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Get your federal and Colorado registrations or registration decision in place before launch, especially the marketplace-only versus direct-sales tax branch.
- Verify city and county rules, including self-collected home-rule sales-tax, zoning, and Denver home-business requirements where you operate.
- Apply to Walmart Marketplace, complete the full public 5-step onboarding flow, and choose your fulfillment path.
- Launch only after your product, tax, shipping, and compliance setup are ready.
- Assuming marketplace tax collection answers every Colorado tax question
- Using resale documents without matching the actual Colorado fact pattern
- Treating Walmart Marketplace like a direct-store channel
- Buying used or refurbished inventory assuming Walmart allows it by default
- Pricing before confirming the actual Walmart referral-fee category
- Ignoring Denver local-license, zoning, occupancy, or local-tax rules for a home-based setup
- Launching with weak supplier documentation
- Missing entity-maintenance dates
- Colorado pushes many real-world licensing, tax, and location questions down to cities and self-collected local tax offices.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check MyBizColorado,
- check city or county business offices,
- check local zoning or planning offices,
- check whether the city is self-collected for sales tax,
- and check whether a local home-business or local tax registration applies.
- Typical local risk areas:
- self-collected home-rule sales-tax licensing
- home occupation permits
- zoning for storage
- commercial deliveries at a residence
- building or fire-code triggers
- lease, HOA, or deed restrictions
- If the business operates in Denver, add one more review layer.
- Denver says that if you intend to do business from home and use your home address as a business address, you must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
- Denver says that any business located in Denver, even one operating from a residence, that makes retail sales of tangible personal property or certain services needs a Denver sales-tax license.
- Denver says it no longer charges a license fee with the biannual Retailer's Sales, Use, Lodgers Tax License.
- Denver also says businesses located in Denver can still have Denver use-tax registration obligations even where a Denver sales-tax license is not the right fit.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is marketplace seller.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is seller-managed shipping or Walmart Fulfillment Services.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products.
Platform-specific official links
Platform Setup
Public page summarizes the public 5-step onboarding flow.
Public page lists business tax ID or business license, supporting documents, ecommerce history, GTINs, compliant catalog, and WFS or another B2C U.S. warehouse path.
Public page lists category-based referral fees and WFS fee examples verified on April 28, 2026.
Public page says an active USPTO trademark is required for each brand.
Fulfillment, Logistics, or Store Operations
Public guide covers state business registration number, document upload, and conditional identity verification.
Public guide covers business verification, payouts, store setup, WFS, seller-fulfilled shipping, and catalog setup.
Public guide says WFS handles storage, pick, pack, shipping, customer support, and returns.
Public guide covers discounted labels, seller protections, and carrier options.
Public policy hub links to prohibited-products, returns, tax, pricing, tracking, and suspension rules.
Public page says products not in new condition are prohibited unless the seller is invited to the Resold program.
Public page says covered items must comply with applicable law and have valid GCC documentation where required.
Insurance Checkpoint
Public policy says sellers must submit a COI if they exceed $100,000 in GMV in any 12-month period or if Walmart notifies them directly.
Denver Branch
Denver says a home-based business using the home address as its business address must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
Denver says a business located in Denver that makes retail sales needs a Denver sales-tax license, even if the business operates from a residence.
Denver's business-tax information page confirms the current no-fee note for the biannual retailer's license and routes users to tax forms and e-services.
Walmart Tax, Payments, and Performance Notes
Public guide says Walmart collects and remits marketplace tax where required on facilitated marketplace sales; use the controlling state marketplace-facilitator rule in this packet for the state-specific collection answer.
Public page says U.S. sellers can use Marketplace Wallet, Hyperwallet, Payoneer, or PingPong; payouts are generally biweekly and new sellers face a payment hold.
Public page says sellers need a valid U.S. return address and cannot use a P.O. box.
Public page verified on April 28, 2026 lists performance metrics and says failure can lead to suppression, suspension, or termination.
Public page says Walmart can automatically unpublish egregiously overpriced offers.
WooCommerce in Colorado: what changes
If you want to open WooCommerce in Colorado, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Get your federal and Colorado registrations in place before direct taxable sales, and keep the public-name branch straight if the storefront name differs from the legal name.
- Verify local permit, zoning, occupancy, storage, and city-tax rules if the business operates from a Denver or other local address.
- Choose the hosting path, install WooCommerce, and complete payments, taxes, shipping, policy pages, checkout, and domain setup.
- Launch only after the product, tax, fulfillment, and compliance setup is ready for a direct storefront rather than a marketplace shortcut.
- treating a direct WooCommerce store like a marketplace-facilitator shortcut,
- treating Colorado state licensing as if it also settles Denver or other self-collected local city rules,
- using resale paperwork before the underlying direct-sales registration branch is actually clear,
- assuming hosting, SSL, payment-gateway verification, or extension limits are already handled because the core plugin is free,
- turning on automated tax, labels, live rates, or Local Pickup before the extension and local branches are actually ready,
- launching before the chosen payment processor, domain, and test checkout have all cleared,
- assuming a 3PL or home-shipping workaround solves the compliance problem by itself,
- mixing personal and business money or failing to keep order, refund, tax, and supplier records aligned,
- leaving WordPress, WooCommerce, themes, or extensions unmanaged after launch.
- Colorado pushes many real-world licensing, tax, and location questions down to cities and self-collected local tax offices.
- For any place where the business will operate:
- check MyBizColorado,
- check city or county business offices,
- check local zoning or planning offices,
- check whether the city is self-collected for sales tax,
- check whether a local home-business or local tax registration applies,
- ask whether home occupation rules apply,
- ask whether storage or shipment prep changes the zoning answer,
- ask whether commercial deliveries at a residence change the local answer,
- ask whether signage or customer pickup triggers another permit question,
- ask whether building or fire-code review applies,
- check lease, HOA, or deed restrictions,
- keep written answers with the address and date when possible.
- Typical local risk areas:
- self-collected home-rule sales-tax licensing
- home occupation permits
- zoning for storage
- commercial deliveries at a residence
- building or fire-code triggers
- lease, HOA, or deed restrictions
- If the business uses a Denver address, keep the home-occupation permit and Denver retailer-license branches visible, especially if inventory is stored at home.
- Denver and other self-collected / home-rule city branches should stay separate from state-administered Colorado sales-tax guidance.
- This guide assumes a U.S.-resident founder starting from scratch.
- The primary lane is DTC ecommerce store.
- The expected fulfillment or operating model is self-fulfillment or 3PL.
- The setup comparison centers on sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- This guide is not starting with food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products.
Platform-specific official links
Platform Setup
Public setup guidance centers onboarding around products, payments, shipping, taxes, marketing, and store personalization.
Public page says there are no platform fees and no revenue share.
Public WordPress.com packaging changed on April 2, 2026; support pages reviewed on April 6, 2026 still distinguish between Business and Commerce Woo paths in ways that matter.
Fulfillment, Logistics, or Store Operations
Public docs say general settings include business address, sell and ship regions, tax calculations, and currency.
Public guide says WooPayments is optional, requires a supported country, and integrates payouts in the WordPress admin.
Public fee tables are detailed and time-sensitive. Do not flatten them into one universal number.
Public docs say most countries pay out to bank accounts, while U.S. merchants can also add a debit card.
Public docs explain software configuration, not the legal duty to register or collect.
Public docs say automated tax comes from the WooCommerce Tax extension path and overrides parts of normal manual-tax behavior.
Core starts with Flat Rate, Free Shipping, and Local Pickup. Core shipping does not include live checkout rates.
Public docs say WooCommerce Shipping can print labels and set return addresses, but live checkout rates require separate extensions.
Public docs show the fulfillment system is extensible and 3rd-party tools can extend statuses and workflows.
Public docs say the Analytics section supports filtering, segmentation, CSV export, and dashboard reporting.
Insurance Checkpoint
No public universal WooCommerce or WooPayments liability-insurance threshold was identified in the reviewed official Woo source set on April 26, 2026. Carrier, landlord, payment-processor, and 3PL contracts can still add their own insurance requirements.
Denver Branch
Denver says a home-based business using the home address as its business address must obtain a zoning permit for a home occupation.
Denver says Online Retail Sales as a home occupation cannot include transferring goods directly to a buyer at the residential premises.
Denver says a business located in Denver that makes retail sales needs a Denver sales-tax license, even if it operates from a residence.
Change your path
Need a different route into this answer?
Use these links if you want another platform, another launch state, or the official source directory before you keep reading.
Official links Shared official links for Colorado
Start with these shared state and federal groups before you layer on the platform-specific overlay. They are the stable baseline reused across the approved Colorado packs.
Statewide Start
State portal that routes founders to filing, licensing, and business resources.
Official one-stop filing tool for Colorado business registration and management.
Official checklist that routes founders to tax, employment, licensing, and maintenance issues.
Entity Choice and Formation
SOS startup FAQ explains trade-name filing and directs founders to other filing paths.
Official SOS filing hub for new entities, trade names, periodic reports, and related filings.
Public instructions confirm the LLC naming, principal-office, registered-agent, and consent requirements.
Reviewed public sources did not identify a separate ordinary SOS post-formation filing for the default Colorado LLC path.
Colorado says the report can be filed two months before or two months after the periodic-report month without penalty.
Sole Proprietor and Local Name Filings
Colorado requires a trade name when an individual is not using the individual's legal first and last name to conduct business.
Public filing page shows the filing fee and filing type directly.
Colorado says state-collected jurisdiction registration does not replace separate local rules in self-collected cities.
Federal and State Tax Setup
Use the direct IRS path only.
Keep the federal income-tax and records branch explicit even if the Airbnb-only booking lane narrows the guest-tax side.
Colorado DOR says the guidance applies to state, county, special district, county lodging, and local marketing district taxes that the Department administers, but not to taxes administered by home-rule cities.
Colorado DOR says anyone who offers rooms or accommodations for rent is required to obtain a sales tax license and collect sales tax on any taxable rental. This is the lodging-specific page that keeps the ordinary Airbnb-only state-license question open.
The same Colorado DOR lodging guidance says that for rooms offered through a marketplace, the marketplace facilitator must collect and remit the applicable state and state-administered sales taxes, county lodging tax, and local marketing district tax. This closes the collection-and-remittance side of the ordinary Airbnb reservation more clearly than the license side.
Colorado DOR's FAQ says the Department does not require marketplace sellers who sell exclusively through a marketplace facilitator to have a state sales tax license, but this page is general and not lodging-specific.
Colorado DOR defines a marketplace as a forum where tangible personal property, commodities, or services are offered for sale, lease, or rental. This helps show the marketplace framework is not limited to product sales.
Colorado DOR says a multichannel seller is a marketplace seller who also offers goods, commodities, or services through other means, and generally must obtain a sales tax license, collect tax, and file returns for independently made sales. This is the cleanest official boundary for leaving the pure Airbnb-only lane.
Airbnb says it collects Colorado Sales Tax, County Lodging Tax, and Local Marketing District Tax on Colorado reservations 29 nights and shorter, but also says hosts remain responsible for all other tax obligations, including state and city jurisdictions.
Entity Tax Maintenance
Colorado's public entity-tax guidance separates C corporation, S corporation, and partnership filing paths.
Fee schedule lists the periodic-report fee, late penalty, and delinquency-curing fee.
Federal Reporting
As of April 29, 2026, domestic entities are exempt from BOI reporting under the public interim-final-rule guidance.
Public FinCEN status page keeps the current domestic-entity exemption visible and is a good second-source check when the Q&A language changes.
Employees, Payroll, and Insurance
Colorado says businesses may register online through MyBizColorado for an unemployment account.
Colorado explains the ordinary UI liability thresholds and annual rate assignment.
Colorado says required employers can be fined up to $500 per day if uninsured.
Employers with fewer than 10 employees nationwide are not required to pay the employer share under the reviewed FAQ.
Colorado says employers must provide at least 1 hour of accrued paid leave per 30 hours worked, up to 48 hours per year.
Public workers' compensation materials identify a rejection-of-coverage branch for certain no-employee contractors.
Local follow-up Local checks that can still change the answer
- Colorado still pushes some permission-to-operate questions down to counties, municipalities, zoning offices, airports, or short-term-rental regulators depending on the lane.
- Keep public-name filing, home-based, zoning, storage, parking, traffic, airport, HOA, lease, condo, deed, and short-term-rental questions separate from the state-level baseline.
- Use the family comparison and platform overlay before you spend money, because the tax, insurance, and operations branch changes by lane.
- self-collected home-rule sales-tax licensing
- home occupation permits
- zoning for storage
- commercial deliveries at a residence
- building or fire-code triggers
- lease, HOA, or deed restrictions
- inventory storage
- recurring buyer pickups
Denver: family-specific local split
- Denver is not one universal local branch for Colorado; the exact city answer changes by family and sometimes by platform.
- Denver storefront lanes can reopen city tax-account, business-license, home-occupation, zoning, storage, or use-permit questions depending on the address and setup.
- Denver marketplace-seller lanes can reopen city tax, storage, inventory, home-business, or permit questions even when the platform handles customer discovery or some tax collection.
- Denver platform-work lanes can reopen local TNC, delivery, worker-status, vehicle, airport, parking, or city-tax questions that do not apply to seller or host lanes.
- Denver hosting can reopen short-term-rental permit, occupancy, local lodging-tax, direct-booking, primary-residence, or host-eligibility questions.
- Open the family comparison first, then open the platform overlay before you spend money on permits, inventory, vehicles, furnishings, or listings tied to Denver.
Representative flagship routes
Frequently asked questions
- Does Colorado use the same setup path for every platform?
No. The state baseline stays useful, but storefront, marketplace, platform-work, and hosting lanes can split the next step in different ways.
- What should I verify after the Colorado baseline?
Check the platform overlay that matches your lane, then keep city, county, home-based, and product-specific rules as a separate local review step.
- When should I open the platform-specific guide instead of staying on this page?
Open the deeper platform guide when the family comparison shows that taxes, insurance, operations, or local branches depend on the platform lane you picked.