Colorado Porch

Front Range

Broomfield property records help you check the parcel, not just the address

A Porch Note from Colorado Porch — plain-English local details for all 64 Colorado counties.

An address tells you where to send the mail. A parcel record tells you what you are actually buying, and those are not always the same thing when a real property decision is on the line.

Broomfield’s property search opens the Assessor’s database, where you can pull a record by street address, owner name, tax area, tax authority, parcel information, legal description, and more. From the same place, the city and county links parcel, floodplain, and tax inquiry tools together, so one lookup can answer several questions at once.

A house is more than its mailing address. The parcel record confirms which tax area applies, how the property is legally described, and exactly which official data you are reading. It also makes a sturdy first stop before you call about permits, floodplain status, a tax bill, or an assessment notice, because you arrive with the parcel number and the right office already in hand.

None of this replaces a title search, a survey, an inspection, or legal advice. It is the early step that catches the obvious mismatch before money moves. Copy the address from a listing sheet into the official search, and make sure the parcel you are reading is the parcel you actually mean to buy.

Sources

Official or primary sources used for this note. Local details can change, so confirm before acting.

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