Fence WorkProperty CareSnow CareTree CareSoonPatioConcreteSoon
Where We Run

Routes across the Front Range.

Denver metro, the western foothills, and the south suburbs up onto the Palmer Divide. Routes are built tight and geographic — if your property doesn't fit a route we can actually run in a storm, we'll tell you instead of signing you.

Your sidewalk is on a clock, and the clock is different in every city.

Front Range municipalities put snow and ice removal on the adjacent property owner or occupant, and most attach a deadline measured in hours after the snow stops. Denver gives a businessfour hours before a citation can issue — and twenty-four to a residence. Arvada's ordinance applies to commercial and multifamily property and reaches past the walk to driveways and parking. Every city below lists what we've verified against the city's own published code.

Denver

City and County of Denver · 5,280 ft

Denver businesses get four hours to clear the walk — six times tighter than the residential rule. The tightest clock in the metro.

4 hours — businesses

Lakewood

Jefferson County · 5,518 ft

24 hours to clear — and Lakewood's rule reaches bikeways, not just sidewalks. Snowfall normals here run well above Denver's.

24 hours

Arvada

Jefferson and Adams Counties · 5,344 ft

Arvada's ordinance skips one- and two-family homes and lands squarely on commercial and multifamily — and it covers driveways and parking areas.

Commercial & multifamily

Wheat Ridge

Jefferson County · 5,459 ft

75.5 inches a year — the highest station normal in our metro service area, and half again what Denver–Central Park gets. 24 hours to clear after 2 inches.

24 hours after 2 in

Golden

Jefferson County · roughly 5,700 ft

Golden's code: 12 hours for commercial, 24 residential, triggered at just 1 inch. Sitting at the mouth of Clear Creek Canyon, it takes the wind, too.

12 hours — commercial

Littleton

Arapahoe County · 5,351 ft

24 hours to clear — and Littleton's code names the official source for when the clock starts, which is unusually precise and unusually useful.

24 hours

Centennial

Arapahoe County · 5,830 ft

The only ordinance on our map written exclusively at commercial, institutional, and multifamily property. Single-family homes are exempt outright.

Commercial only — 24 hrs at 4 in

Parker

Douglas County · 5,869 ft

48 hours to clear — and if the Town has to do it after notice, it bills you. Parker sits on the Palmer Divide's north flank, where the storms land differently.

48 hours

Castle Rock

Douglas County · 6,224 ft

The highest property on our map at 6,224 ft, right on the Palmer Divide. 48 hours to clear, triggered at 2 inches.

48 hours after 2 in

Boulder

Boulder County · 5,430 ft

89.7 inches a year — nearly double Denver. 24 hours to clear at full width, and commercial property has no defense for pushing snow into the street.

24 hours, full width

Don't see your city?

Send us the address anyway. If it fits a route we can genuinely run in a storm, we'll say so — and if it doesn't, we'll tell you that too.