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Colorado Springs and Pikes Peak. CGH Injury Lawyers represents dog bite victims in Colorado Springs from our Denver office.
Colorado Springs, Colorado

Colorado Springs Dog Bite Lawyers Who Hold the Owner Responsible

For people seriously hurt by a dog in Colorado Springs, Colorado law can make the owner liable even if the dog had never bitten anyone before. We serve Colorado Springs and El Paso County from our Denver office and prove it. No fee unless we win.

No fee unless we win

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Serving Colorado Springs From Our Denver Office CGH Injury Lawyers 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201 Denver, CO 80205 (303) 209-9395 Se habla espanol
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  • Colorado runs two tracks under C.R.S. 13-21-124. A serious bodily injury triggers strict liability for your economic losses, with no need to prove the Colorado Springs owner knew the dog was dangerous.
  • For a less serious bite, and for pain and suffering, you recover under negligence by showing the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)).
  • Most Colorado Springs dog bite claims are paid by the owner's homeowner or renter insurance, not out of the owner's pocket. The deadline to file is generally two years from the bite (C.R.S. 13-80-102).

If a dog seriously hurt you in Colorado Springs, state law may make the owner responsible even if the dog had never bitten anyone before. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Colorado Springs and all of El Paso County from our Denver office, a straight shot south on Interstate 25. We handle the insurance claim, the negotiation, and trial in El Paso County District Court when an insurer refuses to be fair. You pay nothing unless we recover for you.

The law that governs your case

Colorado's dog bite statute, C.R.S. 13-21-124, decoded for Colorado Springs

Colorado does not follow a pure "one bite" rule, and it is not a pure strict-liability state either. The dog bite statute sets up two separate tracks, and which one applies to your Colorado Springs case depends almost entirely on how badly you were hurt.

The core of the statute reads: a person who suffers serious bodily injury or death from being bitten by a dog while lawfully on public or private property may bring a civil action to recover economic damages against the dog owner, regardless of the viciousness or dangerous propensities of the dog or the owner's knowledge of them (C.R.S. 13-21-124(2)).

In plain English, two things have to be true for the strict-liability track: your injury has to meet Colorado's definition of serious bodily injury, and you have to have been lawfully on the property where the bite happened. Meet both and the Colorado Springs owner is liable for your economic losses, even if the dog had never shown a hint of aggression before.

Strict liability vs. negligence

The two-track liability system in Colorado

The single most important question in a Colorado Springs dog bite case is which track applies. One track is far easier to win than the other, and the dividing line is the severity of the injury.

Track 1: Strict liability

  • Applies when the bite causes serious bodily injury or death.
  • You do not have to prove the owner was careless or that the dog had bitten before.
  • The bite itself establishes liability for your economic damages.
  • A first-time bite still counts. The dog's clean history is irrelevant.
  • Recovery under this track is limited to economic damages (C.R.S. 13-21-124(2)).

Track 2: Negligence standard

  • Applies when the injury does not meet the serious bodily injury threshold.
  • You must prove the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous.
  • A prior bite or aggressive behavior is the kind of evidence that proves it.
  • This track is also how non-economic damages like pain and suffering are pursued, since the statute leaves other negligence theories intact (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)).
  • It is a harder case, which is exactly when experienced counsel matters most.

What counts as "serious bodily injury"?

Colorado's dog bite statute borrows its definition of serious bodily injury from the criminal code (C.R.S. 18-1-901(3)(p)). In general terms, it covers injuries that carry a substantial risk of death, serious permanent disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of a body part, and certain fractures and burns. A facial scar that does not fade, nerve damage that leaves lasting weakness, or a broken bone from an attack are the kinds of injuries that tend to meet it.

Whether a specific injury crosses that line is a legal judgment, not something to assume on your own. We review your medical records against the statutory definition before we tell you which track your Colorado Springs case sits on.

Local Knowledge

El Paso County animal control. El Paso County courts. Colorado Springs trauma care.

A Colorado Springs dog bite case lives in El Paso County: the agency you report the bite to, the hospital that treated you, and the courthouse where your case may be filed. Here is the ground we work on.

Reporting

Local animal control in El Paso County

In and around Colorado Springs, dog bites are reported to local animal control. Reporting the bite creates an official record, can feed the local dangerous-dog process, and supports your claim. Report the bite even if the owner asks you not to. Confirm the specific reporting steps and any deadline that apply where your bite occurred before relying on them.

Trauma Care

UCHealth Memorial Hospital Central

After a serious Colorado Springs dog attack, the most critically injured patients are typically transported to UCHealth Memorial Hospital Central at 1400 E Boulder St, the first and only Level I trauma center in southern Colorado, designated by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment and verified by the American College of Surgeons. Penrose Hospital, a Level II trauma center, and St. Francis Hospital, a Level III trauma center, also treat bite injuries across the region. Those medical records document the full scope of your injuries, including scarring and nerve damage, and become the backbone of your damages claim.

Courthouse

El Paso County District Court

Personal injury cases that arise in El Paso County are filed in El Paso County District Court, the 4th Judicial District, housed in the El Paso County Judicial Building at 270 S Tejon St, Colorado Springs. Local civil procedure, the judges, and the defense firms differ from the Denver courts, and the people across the table either know your firm is ready to try a case or they don't. We handle El Paso County District Court cases directly.

Why CGH

Why Colorado Springs dog bite victims choose CGH Injury Lawyers

Trial-ready attorneys, bilingual help, and no fee unless we win, serving Colorado Springs from our Denver office. We do not publish dog bite settlement figures, because every bite injury is different and a number on a page tells you nothing about your case. What we offer is the work, not a headline.

The Statute

C.R.S. 13-21-124

For a serious bite, the owner is strictly liable for your economic damages, even with no prior history. We know exactly which track your case belongs on.

Serving Colorado Springs

El Paso County cases, handled directly.

We represent Colorado Springs and El Paso County clients from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, and we file in El Paso County District Court when a case needs to be tried. We come to you when meeting in person matters.

First-Time Bites

No "one bite" excuse.

Colorado rejects the one bite rule for serious injuries. A clean history does not protect the owner.

Who Pays

The insurer, not your neighbor.

Most claims are paid by the owner's homeowner or renter liability coverage, not their savings.

Trial-Ready

8 attorneys, prepared for trial.

Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates and has tried over 25 cases to verdict. When attorneys are genuinely ready to try a case in El Paso County District Court, insurers respond differently to a demand.

Bilingual

Hablamos espanol.

Spanish-speaking staff and attorneys serve Colorado Springs' Spanish-speaking community.

No Win, No Fee

Contingency only.

You pay nothing out of pocket for legal fees. We advance costs and collect only from a settlement or verdict.

After the Bite

What to do after a dog bite in Colorado Springs

Take care of your health first, report the bite, protect the evidence, then call before you talk to the insurer. Here is the path we walk with you.

  1. Get medical care

    UCHealth Memorial Hospital Central, Penrose Hospital, and St. Francis Hospital treat serious bite injuries in Colorado Springs. Even a wound that looks minor can carry infection risk and nerve damage. Get examined, and keep every record.

  2. Report the bite

    In and around Colorado Springs, report the bite to local animal control. Reporting creates an official record and can feed the local dangerous-dog process, even if the owner asks you not to.

  3. Document the scene

    Photograph your injuries, the dog, and where the attack happened. Identify the dog and its owner, and get the names and contact information of any witnesses.

  4. Call before insurance does

    The owner's insurer may call quickly. Do not give a recorded statement or accept any offer before speaking with us. Call (303) 209-9395.

  5. We build your claim

    We confirm which liability track fits, locate the owner's homeowner or renter coverage, gather the animal control record and any history of the dog, and document the full injury.

  6. Negotiate or litigate

    Most cases settle. When insurers refuse a fair offer, we file in El Paso County District Court and try your case.

Compensation

What compensation can you recover after a Colorado Springs dog bite?

A dog bite is rarely just a medical bill. Colorado law recognizes two broad categories of damages, and which ones you can reach depends on the liability track your case sits on.

Economic damages

  • Emergency care, surgery, and follow-up treatment
  • Reconstructive and cosmetic surgery for scarring
  • Lost wages and lost earning capacity
  • Future medical and rehabilitation costs
  • Out-of-pocket expenses tied to the attack

Non-economic damages

  • Pain and suffering
  • Emotional distress and PTSD, common after dog attacks
  • Permanent scarring and disfigurement
  • Loss of enjoyment of life

Here is a distinction many people miss. The strict-liability track in C.R.S. 13-21-124(2) recovers economic damages only. To recover non-economic damages such as pain and suffering, a victim pursues a negligence theory, which the statute expressly leaves available (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)). In a serious injury case, both paths are often pursued together. We structure the claim so that no category of harm you suffered is left on the table.

Owner defenses

Defenses Colorado Springs dog owners use, and how we answer them

The statute lists specific situations where an owner is not liable (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)). Insurers reach for these defenses early. Knowing what each one actually requires is how we keep a valid claim alive.

  1. "You were trespassing"

    The statute protects people lawfully on the property. Colorado defines that broadly to include anyone performing a legal duty, such as a mail carrier, and anyone there by the owner's express or implied invitation (C.R.S. 13-21-124(4)). An open gate or the absence of posted signs can support lawful presence. The statute also bars liability where the property is clearly posted with "no trespassing" or "beware of dog" signs, which is why the facts of where and how you entered matter so much.

  2. "You provoked the dog"

    An owner is not liable when the person knowingly provokes the dog (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)(d)). Knowingly is the key word. Petting a dog, walking past it, or being startled is not provocation. We use witness statements and your own account to keep ordinary, reasonable behavior from being recast as provocation.

  3. "The dog was working"

    The statute carves out dogs used by peace officers or military personnel on duty, and dogs working as hunting, herding, farm, ranch, or predator-control animals on the owner's property (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)). It also exempts bites against veterinary workers, groomers, handlers, and similar professionals acting in their duties. These exemptions are narrow and rarely fit an ordinary household pet biting a visitor in a Colorado Springs neighborhood.

One honest thing we will tell you up front: we do not take dog bite cases we cannot honestly stand behind. If your situation falls squarely within a statutory exemption, we will say so in the free review rather than sign you up and let the case stall. When the law is on your side, we fight hard. When it is not, you deserve to hear that early, for free.

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The hard part of these cases

Filing against the insurance, not your Colorado Springs neighbor

The most common reason people hesitate to pursue a dog bite claim is that the owner is a friend, a neighbor, or a relative. Understanding how the money actually moves usually puts that fear to rest.

  • In most cases you file a claim against the owner's homeowner or renter liability coverage, not against their personal savings or assets.
  • Most homeowner and renter policies in Colorado include liability coverage that responds to dog bite claims, though some insurers exclude certain breeds or cap the coverage. We confirm the policy terms before assuming anything.
  • The insurer pays the settlement or judgment up to the policy limits. The point of liability insurance is to protect both the injured person and the policyholder.
  • The insurance company will contest the claim whether the owner is a stranger or someone you love. Having counsel is how you make the insurer meet its obligation.
Deadlines and reporting

The filing deadline for a Colorado Springs dog bite claim

Two timing issues decide whether a strong case stays viable: reporting the bite to animal control, and the statute of limitations.

  • Report the bite to local animal control even if the owner asks you not to. Reporting creates an official record and can feed the local dangerous-dog process. Confirm the specific reporting steps and any deadline for where the bite occurred before relying on them.
  • The deadline to file most Colorado personal injury lawsuits, including dog bite claims, is generally two years from the date of injury (C.R.S. 13-80-102). Do not wait until the deadline approaches; evidence and witness memories fade.
  • When the victim is a child, Colorado law tolls the deadline. The limitations clock for a minor generally does not begin until the child turns 18. A lawyer should still be involved early, because evidence does not wait for the clock.
Questions

Colorado Springs dog bite, frequently asked questions

Does the dog have to have bitten someone before for me to have a Colorado Springs case?

No. Colorado rejects the "one bite rule" for serious injuries. Under the strict-liability track in C.R.S. 13-21-124(2), the dog's history is irrelevant if your injury qualifies as serious bodily injury. The Colorado Springs owner is liable for your economic damages even if the dog had never bitten anyone before. For less serious injuries, the dog's history matters because you would proceed under a negligence theory.

Can I recover pain and suffering for a dog bite in Colorado?

Often, yes, but not through the strict-liability track alone. C.R.S. 13-21-124(2) limits the strict-liability claim to economic damages. To recover non-economic damages like pain and suffering, you pursue a negligence theory, which the statute expressly preserves (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)). In a serious injury case both paths are commonly pursued together. We structure the claim to reach every category of harm.

Who actually pays a Colorado Springs dog bite settlement?

In most cases the owner's homeowner or renter liability insurance pays, not the owner personally. Most Colorado policies include this coverage, though some insurers exclude certain breeds or cap the limits. We confirm the policy terms early so we know what coverage is available before negotiating.

Where is a Colorado Springs dog bite lawsuit filed?

Personal injury cases that arise in El Paso County are filed in El Paso County District Court, the 4th Judicial District, in the El Paso County Judicial Building at 270 S Tejon St, Colorado Springs. Most dog bite claims settle before a lawsuit is ever filed, but where a case would be filed affects the local rules, the jury pool, and which adjusters and defense firms you face. We handle El Paso County District Court cases directly.

Do you have an office in Colorado Springs?

We serve Colorado Springs and all of El Paso County from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, a direct route south on Interstate 25. Distance does not change how we handle your case. Much of a dog bite claim is built through medical records, the animal control report, and the insurance file, and we come to you when meeting in person matters. You can reach us at (303) 209-9395.

How long do I have to file a dog bite claim in Colorado?

The deadline for most personal injury claims in Colorado, including dog bites, is generally two years from the date of injury (C.R.S. 13-80-102). If the victim is a child, the deadline is tolled and the clock generally does not start until the child turns 18. Even with that extra time, evidence should be preserved early, so it is best to consult an attorney soon after the bite.

What counts as serious bodily injury under the statute?

Colorado's dog bite statute uses the definition of serious bodily injury from C.R.S. 18-1-901(3)(p). It generally covers injuries that carry a substantial risk of death, serious permanent disfigurement, protracted loss or impairment of a body part, and certain fractures and burns. Facial scarring, nerve damage, and broken bones from an attack are common examples. Whether a particular injury crosses that line is a legal judgment we make after reviewing your medical records.

What should I do right after a dog bite in Colorado Springs?

Get medical care at UCHealth Memorial Hospital Central or another Colorado Springs hospital, photograph your injuries and the scene, identify the dog and its owner, and report the bite to local animal control even if the owner asks you not to. Keep every medical record and receipt. Then speak with an attorney before giving any recorded statement to an insurer. You can reach us at (303) 209-9395.

It's More Than Money.

You were bitten in Colorado Springs. We handle everything else.

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Available in English and Spanish.

Tell us what happened

100% confidential. No fee unless we win.

Prefer to read first? See how Colorado's dog bite law works.

CGH Injury Lawyers · 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205 · Serving Colorado Springs and El Paso County