Holiday Pay Laws in Colorado

Colorado (CO) · Holiday pay · Last reviewed June 2026

Holiday pay in Colorado — Kloqk free time clock and compliance guide

Paid holidays

Not required

Premium pay

Not required

Set by

Employer policy

Are employers required to pay for holidays?

Neither federal law nor Colorado requires private employers to offer paid holidays or to pay extra for working on a holiday. Holiday pay is a benefit you choose to offer, not a legal mandate.

The exception is when a contract, collective bargaining agreement, or your own written policy promises it — at that point it becomes enforceable.

How most employers handle it

Common practice is a set list of paid holidays (often 6–11 days a year), and in some industries, premium pay for employees who work them. Whatever you decide, put it in writing so expectations are clear and consistent.

Tracking holidays

A time clock with a holiday calendar lets you mark paid holidays and keep them cleanly separated from worked hours when you run payroll.

This is general information, not legal advice. Wage-and-hour rules change — confirm the current rules for Colorado with the official sources below before acting.

Official sources

More Colorado guides

Holiday pay in other states

Colorado holiday pay: frequently asked questions

Does Colorado require holiday pay?

No — Colorado does not require private employers to provide paid holidays or premium pay for working a holiday. It's set by your policy unless a contract says otherwise.

Do you get time and a half on holidays in Colorado?

Not by law. Holiday premium pay is a voluntary benefit in Colorado unless an employer policy or contract promises it.

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