Automotive in Colorado

Colorado Automotive Intel

Wednesday, May 27, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on automotive developments in Colorado. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on colorado automotive headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Colorado Automotive Headlines

1 story

1.1

Colorado DMV to launch major digital upgrade for driver’s license, vehicle systems in February.

The Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles is launching a major digital transformation in February, upgrading its driver’s license and motor vehicle technology system, including public-facing services.

Why It Matters

Dealerships, fleet operators, and service providers should prepare for potential changes in transaction workflows, processing times, and customer service channels as the state modernizes its core DMV infrastructure.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Stop-sale orders apply to used inventory too.

Federal law prohibits the sale of new vehicles under an open recall; the rules vary for used vehicles by state. Several states now require dealers to disclose open recalls to used-car buyers and to repair recalled vehicles before sale. Compliance varies widely across regions.

Why It Matters

Selling a vehicle with an undisclosed open recall produces consumer-protection exposure and, in some states, automatic rescission rights for the buyer. The cost is far higher than the recall repair would have been.

2.2

Warranty and service contract are not synonyms.

A warranty is included in the purchase and obligates the seller; a service contract is sold separately and obligates a third-party administrator. The two are regulated differently — warranties under Magnuson-Moss federal law, service contracts under state insurance or specialty regulation. Misadvertising one as the other is a common consumer-protection issue.

Why It Matters

Misrepresented coverage produces immediate refund liability for the contract price plus potential consumer-protection damages. Sales-floor scripts are the most common source.

2.3

FCRA permissible purpose for credit pulls — narrower than most assume.

A dealer may pull a credit report only with the consumer's authorization or for a specific permissible purpose under FCRA — typically completion of a credit transaction initiated by the consumer. Pulling a credit report based on a sales-floor walk-in without explicit authorization is a violation, even with intent to "save the customer time.".

Why It Matters

FCRA violations carry statutory damages even without proof of harm, plus attorney fees. A pattern of unauthorized pulls can produce class-action exposure.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 27, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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