Colorado Porch

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Weld property tax is half-pay or full-pay

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

A Weld County property-tax bill comes due for the previous year, and you get exactly two ways to clear it. You can split the total into two equal installments, each on its own due date. Or you can pay the whole thing at once. There is no third path.

Partial payments are not accepted. That word “partial” trips people up, so it is worth being plain about: you cannot mail in a round number, a portion of a half, or whatever you happen to have on hand and expect the county to apply it. A payment either covers an accepted amount or it does not count. Sending “something” toward the bill is not the same as making a payment the Treasurer will record.

This shapes how you plan cash after a closing, what you do when escrow changes hands, and how you help an older relative whose bill arrives in their name. Knowing the structure ahead of time keeps a well-meant check from bouncing back.

The amounts and the current-year dates live on the parcel’s own tax account, which is the figure to trust when you sit down to pay. Pull that up before you mail anything, set up an online payment, or assume a lender has it handled. The Weld County Treasurer’s tax information page walks through the same rules. The durable part stays simple: half, then half, or the full amount in one go.

Sources

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

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