How Long Is a Life Sentence in Colorado? (2026 Guide)

This article was last reviewed and updated on March 17, 2026. All statutes, case law, and sentencing data have been verified against current Colorado government sources.
In Colorado, a life sentence does not have a single, fixed meaning. The number of years a person must serve before becoming eligible for parole depends almost entirely on when the offense was committed. Someone convicted of a crime before July 1977 could be eligible for parole after just 10 years, while someone convicted after 1985 must serve a minimum of 40 years.
This three-tiered system makes Colorado unusual among states. Combined with the 2020 abolition of the death penalty and ongoing legislative reform efforts, Colorado's approach to life sentencing has undergone significant transformation in recent decades.
Colorado Life Sentence Statutes
Colorado's criminal code defines murder and its penalties across several key statutes.
First-Degree Murder (C.R.S. § 18-3-102): A person commits first-degree murder if they, after deliberation and with intent to cause the death of another person, cause the death of that person or another. First-degree murder also includes felony murder — a death that occurs during the commission of certain enumerated felonies. First-degree murder is a Class 1 felony carrying a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment.
Second-Degree Murder (C.R.S. § 18-3-103): A person commits second-degree murder if they knowingly cause the death of another person. This is a Class 2 felony. The presumptive sentencing range is 16 to 48 years, though aggravating factors can push the sentence higher.
Sentencing for First-Degree Murder (C.R.S. § 18-1.3-1201): This statute governs the sentencing framework for Class 1 felonies. Following the abolition of the death penalty, the maximum sentence for first-degree murder is life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
Manslaughter (C.R.S. § 18-3-104): A Class 4 felony carrying 2 to 6 years for the basic offense, with an aggravated range of up to 16 years for heat-of-passion manslaughter under certain circumstances.
Parole Eligibility: The Variable Timeline
This is the most critical and unusual feature of Colorado's life sentencing system. The Colorado General Assembly has changed parole eligibility rules multiple times, and the law that was in effect at the time of the offense controls whether and when a life-sentenced person can seek parole.
Before July 1, 1977: 10 Years
Individuals convicted of first-degree murder for offenses committed before July 1, 1977, become eligible for parole consideration after serving 10 years. This reflects the sentencing philosophy of the era, which generally favored rehabilitation and indeterminate sentences.
Very few people remain incarcerated under this framework, given the nearly 50 years that have passed. However, those who were denied parole repeatedly — or who committed their offenses as young adults — may still be affected.
July 1, 1977 to June 30, 1985: 20 Years
For offenses committed during this eight-year window, the minimum time before parole eligibility is 20 years. The Colorado legislature doubled the minimum during this period as part of a nationwide trend toward tougher sentencing.
After July 1, 1985: 40 Years
For offenses committed on or after July 1, 1985, a life sentence carries a minimum of 40 years before parole eligibility. This is among the longest parole minimums in the country.
At 40 years, many life-sentenced individuals will be elderly before they are even eligible for a hearing — and eligibility does not guarantee release. The Colorado Board of Parole evaluates each case individually, considering the nature of the offense, institutional conduct, risk assessment, victim impact, and release planning.
Life Without Parole (LWOP)
Colorado also imposes life without the possibility of parole. LWOP is the maximum sentence for first-degree murder following the abolition of the death penalty in 2020.
For LWOP sentences, there is no parole eligibility date. The only paths to release are executive clemency from the governor or a successful court appeal that results in resentencing.
| Offense Date | Parole Eligibility |
|---|---|
| Before July 1, 1977 | 10 years |
| July 1, 1977 – June 30, 1985 | 20 years |
| After July 1, 1985 | 40 years |
| LWOP (any date) | Never |
Abolition of the Death Penalty
Colorado abolished the death penalty on March 23, 2020, when Governor Jared Polis signed Senate Bill 20-100 into law. The bill passed the state Senate 19-13 and the House 38-27, making Colorado the 22nd state to abolish capital punishment.
The law applied prospectively — eliminating the death penalty for offenses committed on or after July 1, 2020. However, Governor Polis took the additional step of commuting the sentences of all three men on Colorado's death row to life without parole.
The Three Commuted Death Row Inmates
The three individuals whose sentences were commuted were all convicted of the 1993 murder of Lorraine Martelli, the owner of a Denver pizza restaurant:
- Robert Ray — sentenced to death in 2009
- Sir Mario Owens — sentenced to death in 2008
- Nathan Dunlap — sentenced to death in 1996 for the 1993 Chuck E. Cheese massacre in Aurora, in which he killed four employees. Dunlap's case had been particularly contentious; former Governor John Hickenlooper issued a temporary reprieve in 2013 rather than allow the execution to proceed.
Governor Polis stated that the commutations were necessary to ensure equal justice, noting that the death penalty was applied inconsistently and disproportionately in Colorado.
Colorado's Last Execution
Colorado last carried out an execution on October 13, 1997, when Gary Lee Davis was put to death by lethal injection for the 1986 kidnapping, sexual assault, and murder of Virginia May. Davis was the first person executed in Colorado since 1967.
In total, Colorado executed only one person during the modern death penalty era (post-1976).
Notable Life Sentence Cases
James Holmes — Aurora Theater Shooting (2015)
On July 20, 2012, James Holmes opened fire inside a Century 16 movie theater in Aurora during a midnight screening of The Dark Knight Rises. He killed 12 people and injured 70 others in one of the deadliest mass shootings in American history.
Holmes was convicted of 24 counts of first-degree murder (two counts per victim) and 140 counts of attempted murder. The prosecution sought the death penalty. During the sentencing phase, the jury deadlocked — unable to reach a unanimous verdict for death — and the judge imposed the mandatory alternative: life without the possibility of parole, plus 3,318 years for the attempted murder and other charges.
Holmes is incarcerated in an undisclosed out-of-state facility for security reasons.
Anderson Lee Aldrich — Club Q Shooting (2023)
On November 19, 2022, Anderson Lee Aldrich opened fire inside Club Q, an LGBTQ+ nightclub in Colorado Springs, killing five people and injuring 17. Patrons subdued Aldrich before police arrived.
In June 2023, Aldrich pleaded guilty to five counts of first-degree murder and 46 counts of attempted first-degree murder. The court imposed 55 consecutive life sentences — five life sentences for the murders plus 50 for the attempted murders. Aldrich will never be eligible for parole.
The case was prosecuted in state court. Federal hate crime charges were also filed but deferred following the state conviction and sentencing.
Christopher Watts — Family Murder (2018)
In August 2018, Christopher Watts strangled his pregnant wife Shanann and their two daughters, Bella (4) and Celeste (3), at their home in Frederick, Colorado. He confessed after initially claiming they had disappeared.
Watts pleaded guilty to multiple counts of first-degree murder and was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. The plea deal took the death penalty off the table at the request of the victims' family, who did not want a prolonged trial.
The case generated enormous public interest and was the subject of multiple documentaries and a Netflix film.
Recent Legislative Changes
Emerging Adult Sentencing Guidelines (2021)
In 2021, Colorado enacted new sentencing guidelines recognizing the developmental differences of emerging adults aged 18 to 25. Brain development research has consistently shown that the prefrontal cortex — responsible for impulse control, judgment, and long-term planning — does not fully mature until the mid-20s.
Under the new guidelines, courts must consider the offender's age, maturity level, and capacity for rehabilitation when imposing sentences on individuals in this age group. While this does not prevent life sentences for emerging adults, it requires judges to weigh age-related factors that may result in more nuanced sentencing.
SB 26-115: Sentencing Review for Long-Serving Individuals (Pending, March 2026)
Senate Bill 26-115, introduced in the current legislative session, would create a formal sentencing review process for individuals who have served extended terms of imprisonment. If enacted, it would allow certain long-serving individuals to petition the court for a review of their sentence.
The bill is part of a growing national second look movement. As of September 2025, 25 states plus D.C. and the federal government have enacted some form of second look judicial sentence review policy, according to the Sentencing Project.
SB 26-115 remained pending as of March 2026. Its passage would represent a significant shift in how Colorado approaches long-term incarceration.
Governor Polis Skips Year-End Clemency (2025)
In a notable departure from recent practice, Governor Jared Polis did not issue any year-end clemency grants in December 2025 — the first time he skipped the annual clemency cycle during his tenure. Previous years had seen Polis grant commutations and pardons during the holiday period, consistent with a tradition shared by many governors.
The decision drew criticism from criminal justice reform advocates who had expected action on several pending clemency petitions.
| Year | Change |
|---|---|
| 2026 | SB 26-115 introduced (pending): sentencing review for long-serving individuals |
| 2025 | Gov. Polis skips year-end clemency for first time in tenure |
| 2021 | New sentencing guidelines for emerging adults (ages 18–25) |
| 2020 | Death penalty abolished (SB 20-100); 3 death row sentences commuted to LWOP |
| 2018 | Christopher Watts sentenced to LWOP for family murders |
| 2015 | James Holmes sentenced to LWOP for Aurora theater shooting |
| 1997 | Last execution in Colorado (Gary Lee Davis) |
Juvenile Life Sentences in Colorado
Colorado has effectively eliminated juvenile life without parole (JLWOP). The state's reforms in this area have come through a combination of legislative action and the broader death penalty abolition movement.
The U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Miller v. Alabama (2012) held that mandatory life without parole for juveniles violates the Eighth Amendment. Colorado went further, aligning its sentencing framework to ensure that juveniles convicted of the most serious offenses receive sentences that account for their youth and capacity for change.
Under current Colorado law, juveniles convicted in adult court are not subject to mandatory LWOP. Courts must conduct individualized sentencing hearings that consider the offender's age, maturity, family circumstances, and potential for rehabilitation.
Colorado's 2021 emerging adult sentencing guidelines extended similar considerations to young adults up to age 25, further reinforcing the state's recognition that youthful offenders warrant different sentencing considerations.
Historical Context
Colorado's approach to life sentencing has evolved considerably over the past century.
Early parole framework: Before the tough-on-crime era, Colorado's sentencing system was indeterminate, with parole boards exercising broad discretion. The 10-year parole minimum for pre-1977 offenses reflects this philosophy.
Tougher sentencing (1977–1985): Like many states during this period, Colorado doubled its parole minimum to 20 years in response to rising crime rates and public demand for longer sentences.
The 40-year minimum (1985): Colorado's decision to set a 40-year minimum for post-1985 life sentences placed it among the strictest states for parole eligibility. This effectively ensured that most life-sentenced individuals would spend the majority of their lives in prison.
Death penalty era: Colorado reinstated the death penalty in 1975 but used it sparingly. Only one execution was carried out during the modern era. Multiple governors expressed reservations about capital punishment, with Hickenlooper's 2013 reprieve of Nathan Dunlap signaling the political shift that ultimately led to abolition.
Abolition and reform (2020–present): The death penalty's elimination and subsequent legislative activity — including emerging adult guidelines and the pending SB 26-115 — suggest Colorado is moving toward a more nuanced sentencing framework, though the 40-year parole minimum for post-1985 offenses remains firmly in place.
Colorado Life Sentence at a Glance
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Life with parole minimum | 10, 20, or 40 years (by offense date) |
| LWOP available | Yes (first-degree murder) |
| Death penalty | Abolished (2020, SB 20-100) |
| Last execution | October 13, 1997 (Gary Lee Davis) |
| JLWOP banned | Effectively yes |
| Emerging adult provisions | Yes (ages 18–25, since 2021) |
| Pending reform | SB 26-115 (sentencing review) |
| Key statutes | C.R.S. 18-3-102, 18-3-103, 18-1.3-1201 |
| Parole board | Colorado Board of Parole |
Related Pages
Sources and References
- C.R.S. § 18-3-102(law.justia.com)
- C.R.S. § 18-3-103(law.justia.com)
- C.R.S. § 18-1.3-1201(law.justia.com)
- C.R.S. § 18-3-104(law.justia.com)
- Colorado Board of Parole(colorado.gov).gov
- Sentencing Project(sentencingproject.org)
- *Miller v. Alabama*(law.cornell.edu).gov