Haven’t Received a Division Order in Colorado? Here’s Why — and the Fix

You leased your Colorado minerals, or you know a well is producing, but no division order and no check has shown up. In almost every case it means the operator can’t yet confirm who you are or what you own — not that you aren’t owed. This guide explains why Colorado royalties sit in suspense, what Colorado’s payment rules require, and how to get into pay. It is part of Valor’s mineral owner’s guide and the Colorado mineral rights hub.

Bottom line: No division order on producing Colorado minerals almost always means the operator can’t yet confirm your title or your decimal interest — so revenue accrues in suspense rather than being lost. Colorado law generally requires operators to begin paying proceeds once title is marketable in the owner's name, and to pay on a regular cycle thereafter, and like most producing states, Colorado can impose statutory interest on royalty proceeds held past the period the law allows — confirm the current Colorado rate. Confirm production with the ECMC, clear any title gap, and get a division order issued; the suspended balance should then release.

Step 1: Confirm the well is producing

Use ECMC records (and any old check stubs) to confirm production and identify the operator and unit.

Step 2: Reach the right operator

Contact the current operator of record — it may have changed — and ask the status of your interest.

Step 3: Clear the issue holding pay

Resolve the specific blocker: title/heirship, address, decimal, or an operator hold.

Step 4: Get the division order issued

Once title is confirmed, the operator issues a division order stating your decimal; verify it before signing.

Step 5: Release the suspense

With the division order in place, the accrued suspended balance — plus any Colorado statutory interest — should be released.

Colorado payment and suspense basics

Colorado law generally requires operators to begin paying proceeds once title is marketable in the owner's name, and to pay on a regular cycle thereafter. And like most producing states, Colorado can impose statutory interest on royalty proceeds held past the period the law allows — confirm the current Colorado rate — so a delayed Colorado check is usually accruing value, not disappearing. Production is regulated by the Energy & Carbon Management Commission (ECMC, formerly COGCC), whose well and unit records help confirm a well is producing and which unit your interest sits in. If a check truly never arrives and the balance ages out, it escheats — searchable via the Colorado unclaimed-property program (and Valor's guide to finding unclaimed mineral money, which lists the official site for every major producing state). Common Colorado causes of a missing division order: unconfirmed title after a sale or death, an address the operator can’t reach, a decimal dispute, or a recent operator-of-record change.

Colorado facts at a glance

The Colorado-specific facts that shape this situation — a citable reference. General guidance as of June 2026; confirm specifics with a CPA or attorney.

Colorado oil & gas facts relevant to no division order received. General guidance as of June 2026; confirm specifics with a CPA or attorney.
ItemColorado detail
RegulatorEnergy & Carbon Management Commission (ECMC, formerly COGCC)
Severance / production taxA graduated severance tax of 2%–5% of gross income (with a stripper-well exemption)
Where deeds are recordedCounty clerk and recorder
Title transferProbate, or an affidavit of heirship where Colorado allows it, recorded with the county clerk and recorder in each county where the minerals lie
State inheritance / estate taxColorado has no state inheritance or estate tax
Compulsory pooling of unleased ownersColorado allows statutory (forced) pooling under C.R.S. 34-60-116, so an unleased owner can be pooled into a unit
Governing statuteC.R.S. tit. 34, art. 60

How Valor helps Colorado owners

This is exactly the paperwork-heavy, deadline-sensitive work that benefits from a professional. Valor verifies ownership, works the ECMC/county records, handles operators and division orders, and then manages the interest through the mineral.tech® platform so nothing slips. Because Valor manages minerals rather than buying them, the goal is to grow the income of your Colorado asset — not to acquire it.

Learn the Terms

Division orders, suspense, royalty — Valor's glossary defines every term in plain language.

Mineral Glossary

Get Help in Colorado

Valor can verify your interest and get you into pay. Request a confidential review.

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Frequently Asked Questions — No Division Order Received in Colorado

Because the operator can’t yet confirm your ownership. Colorado operators issue a division order only after title is marketable in your name. The usual blockers are unconfirmed title after a sale or death, a bad address, a decimal dispute, or a recent operator change.

Colorado law generally requires operators to begin paying proceeds once title is marketable in the owner's name, and to pay on a regular cycle thereafter. Beyond that, like most producing states, Colorado can impose statutory interest on royalty proceeds held past the period the law allows — confirm the current Colorado rate. Suspense is not forfeiture — the money accrues until the blocker is cleared, then releases.

Like most producing states, Colorado can impose statutory interest on royalty proceeds held past the period the law allows — confirm the current Colorado rate. Keeping records of when production began helps you confirm you received the interest you’re owed.

The current operator of record — confirm it through ECMC records, since operators change. Valor can serve as your point of contact, confirm production and title, and push the division order and suspense release through for you.

Usually not. Most cases are title or paperwork, not litigation. Valor resolves the blocker, verifies the decimal, and gets you into pay; a title attorney is only needed for genuinely contested Colorado title.

Key Takeaways

  • Suspense ≠ lost: a missing Colorado division order means revenue is accruing until title is confirmed.
  • Colorado has payment rules: Colorado law generally requires operators to begin paying proceeds once title is marketable in the owner's name, and to pay on a regular cycle thereafter.
  • Interest may accrue: like most producing states, Colorado can impose statutory interest on royalty proceeds held past the period the law allows — confirm the current Colorado rate.
  • Confirm via ECMC: use ECMC records to confirm production and the current operator.
  • Get help: contact Valor to clear the blocker and get into pay on your Colorado minerals.

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More owner guides for Colorado

Other situations in Colorado

Inherited Mineral Rights in Colorado · Got a Lease Offer in Colorado · Unleased Minerals in Colorado

No Division Order Received in other states

Arkansas · Kansas · Louisiana · Montana · New Mexico · North Dakota · Ohio · Oklahoma · Pennsylvania · Texas · Utah · West Virginia · Wyoming

This page combines two of Valor's guides. Read the full situation guide and the Colorado hub, or browse other owner situations — and remember Valor manages the minerals (you keep them).

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