Colorado PTO Payout Laws and Payout Calculator

Blasko Sarcevic
Published
Find out whether Colorado requires employers to pay out unused PTO at separation, and estimate what your payout is worth. (Payout required - use-it-or-lose-it prohibited.)
Topic
TODO: generate image
Colorado PTO payout rule: Payout required. Diagram of unused hours times hourly rate equals payout.
Hourly rate $25.00 · 40 unused hours.
Payout required: Accrued vacation must be paid out; forfeiture is prohibited. Regular withholding method. Use-it-or-lose-it prohibited. State income tax (if any) not modeled here.
Estimates only — not legal or tax advice. 2026 rates and state rules can change; confirm them before relying on them.
Does Colorado require PTO payout at termination?
In Colorado, accrued vacation is generally treated as earned wages, so employers must pay out your unused balance when you leave, regardless of company policy. Accrued vacation must be paid out; forfeiture is prohibited. Regular withholding method. [VERIFY: confirm current Colorado statute and case law before publishing.]
How PTO payout is calculated in Colorado
Multiply your unused PTO hours by your hourly rate. Salaried employees divide annual salary by 2,080 to get the hourly rate first.
Example: $52,000 / 2,080 = $25/hour; 40 unused hours = a $1,000 gross payout. Use the calculator above for your exact figures.
Is a PTO payout taxed in Colorado?
A PTO payout is taxable supplemental income: 22% federal withholding, Social Security (6.2%), and Medicare (1.45%), plus Colorado state income tax.
General information only, not legal or tax advice. State rules change; confirm with your state labor agency or counsel.
Frequently asked questions
- Does Colorado require employers to pay out unused vacation?
- In Colorado, accrued vacation is generally treated as earned wages, so employers must pay out your unused balance when you leave, regardless of company policy. Accrued vacation must be paid out; forfeiture is prohibited. Regular withholding method.
- Is "use-it-or-lose-it" legal in Colorado?
- Colorado restricts use-it-or-lose-it: accrued vacation generally cannot be forfeited.
- How is my Colorado PTO payout taxed?
- At the federal supplemental rate (22%) plus Social Security and Medicare, and Colorado income tax.
About the author

Blasko Sarcevic
Founder, Time-Out Zone
Connect on LinkedInBlasko writes about leave management, policy design, and running time-off operations at scale.
Related
Managing payouts for a whole team?
Time-Out Zone tracks accrual, carryover, and balances automatically, so final payouts are correct without spreadsheets.
Connect on LinkedIn