Slip and fall injuries across the Denver Tech Center send people to emergency rooms with fractures, head injuries, and spinal damage every week. The Greenwood Village slip and fall accident lawyers at Legal Help in Colorado represent people hurt by property hazards that owners failed to fix. Our team works from 8480 E Orchard Rd, Suite 2400, in the center of Greenwood Village.
For more than 20 years, we have handled fall injury claims against property owners, management companies, and commercial landlords across Arapahoe County. We understand how these cases are built, what evidence matters most, and where property owners try to avoid accountability.
Find Out If Your Fall May Lead to a Claim
Slip and fall cases often hinge on details about how long a hazard existed and what the property owner knew. Early review helps protect key evidence.
Call (303) 351-2567 for a free consultation. We’re available 24/7.
Why Legal Help in Colorado for Your Slip and Fall Claim?
Fall injury cases are harder to prove than most people expect. Unlike a car accident with a police report and clear vehicle damage, a slip and fall relies on records that the property owner controls. Our Greenwood Village personal injury attorneys know where to look for that evidence and how to preserve it before it disappears.

Our firm has recovered a $10.5 million verdict, a $2 million settlement in personal injury cases, and many other results for clients injured due to negligence. Those outcomes reflect an approach built on thorough investigation and trial-level preparation from the start.
Direct Access to Your Legal Team
A slip and fall claim moves quickly once filed. Property owners repair hazards, surveillance footage gets erased, and cleaning logs rotate out of storage. Our team acts fast, and we keep you informed through every step.
Call (303) 351-2567 any time for a free case review. We collect no fees upfront and take payment only if we recover compensation on your behalf.
Get a Team That Knows Where to Find the Evidence
Property owners control many of the records that determine liability. We act quickly to secure what your case depends on.
Contact us today for a free case review.
How Does a Slip and Fall Claim Work in Colorado?
Colorado handles slip and fall cases under the Premises Liability Act, C.R.S. §13-21-115. This law determines when a property owner is responsible for injuries that occur on their land or within their building.
The law does not make property owners responsible for every fall. It requires the injured person to prove specific things about the property owner’s conduct and knowledge.
Proving the Property Owner Failed to Act
A successful slip and fall claim in Colorado rests on three connected questions. First, did the property owner owe you a duty of care? For customers, business visitors, and many tenants, the answer is usually yes. Property owners must inspect their premises regularly, fix known hazards, and warn visitors about dangers they have not yet repaired. If you have questions about your case, a Greenwood Village premises liability lawyer can help evaluate your situation.
Second, did the property owner breach that duty? A grocery store that mops a floor but posts no wet floor sign breaches its duty. A parking garage owner who skips ice treatment on a ramp during a January freeze breaches its duty.
Third, did that breach directly cause your injury? The fall must have resulted from the specific hazard the property owner failed to address.
Not Sure If the Property Owner Is Responsible?
We can evaluate the facts of your fall and explain whether the law supports a claim in your situation. Call now to speak with a Greenwood Village slip and fall lawyer.
What Role Does “Notice” Play in a Greenwood Village Slip and Fall Case?
Notice is the legal concept that separates strong claims from weak ones. In plain terms, it asks whether the property owner knew about the dangerous condition or had enough time and opportunity to discover it.
Colorado recognizes two forms of notice, and proving at least one of them is essential to a successful slip and fall claim.
Actual Notice vs. Constructive Notice
Actual notice exists when the property owner had direct knowledge of the hazard. A written maintenance request about a leaking pipe that makes a lobby floor slippery creates actual notice. An incident report from a prior fall in the same location creates actual notice.
Constructive notice applies when the hazard existed long enough that a reasonable property owner, following normal inspection procedures, would have found it. A puddle in a grocery store aisle that sat for 45 minutes with no cleanup effort may establish constructive notice. Ice that formed overnight on a building entrance and remained untreated through the morning commute may establish constructive notice.
The distinction matters because property owners and their insurers frequently argue that they had no knowledge of the condition. Uncovering the paper trail behind notice is often the most important part of investigating a slip and fall claim.
Where Do Slip and Fall Injuries Happen Most Often in Greenwood Village?
Greenwood Village’s commercial landscape creates fall risks in locations that thousands of people visit daily. The Denver Tech Center’s concentration of office towers, retail centers, and restaurants means high foot traffic in buildings that require constant maintenance to stay safe.
Indoor Fall Hazards in Commercial Properties
DTC office buildings present consistent indoor hazards. Lobby floors that become slick when rain or snow is tracked inside are a frequent cause of falls. Stairwells with worn carpet, loose treads, or damaged handrails catch visitors off guard.
Retail stores and restaurants along Greenwood Plaza and Arapahoe Road face their own risks. Produce sections and drink stations generate spills. Kitchen grease near service areas creates slick surfaces. Bathrooms with poor drainage leave standing water on tile floors.
Outdoor Fall Hazards and Colorado Weather
Colorado weather turns ordinary walkways into hazards for months at a time. Ice forms on sidewalks between DTC office buildings overnight and may remain until mid-morning. Parking garage ramps collect ice at their lowest points, where drainage is poorest. Building entrances facing north often stay icy throughout the day during winter because they receive no direct sunlight.
Spring and summer bring different risks. Afternoon thunderstorms leave standing water on outdoor patios and in parking lots near Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre and the commercial areas off Orchard Road.
Awards & Accolades
What Compensation May a Slip and Fall Claim Recover?
The financial impact of a serious fall extends well beyond the initial emergency room visit. Hip fractures, spinal injuries, traumatic brain injuries, and torn ligaments often require months of treatment and rehabilitation. Colorado law allows injured people to pursue compensation that reflects both the immediate and long-term effects of these injuries.
Categories of Damages in Slip and Fall Cases
Compensation in a Colorado slip and fall claim generally falls into two groups. Economic damages cover losses with a defined dollar amount. These include hospital bills, surgical costs, physical therapy expenses, and income lost during recovery. If the injury reduces your ability to perform your previous job, lost earning capacity may also factor in.
Non-economic damages address the personal toll of the injury. Chronic pain, reduced mobility, emotional distress, and the inability to participate in daily activities all fall into this category. Colorado law places certain caps on non-economic damages, and the specific limits depend on when the injury occurred.
What Affects the Value of a Slip and Fall Claim?
Several issues influence how compensation develops in a fall injury claim. The seriousness of the injury and the length of treatment usually carry the greatest weight. A hip fracture requiring surgery and months of rehabilitation creates a very different claim than a soft tissue bruise that heals in weeks.
Evidence showing that the property owner knew about the hazard strengthens the claim significantly. Prior complaints, failed inspections, and lapsed maintenance schedules all demonstrate that the owner had time and reason to act. Colorado’s comparative negligence rule under C.R.S. §13-21-111 may also affect the final recovery if the defense argues that the injured person shared some responsibility, with recovery barred entirely at 50% fault or above.
Make Sure Your Claim Reflects the Full Impact of the Injury
Serious falls often involve long-term treatment and lasting limitations. We help document the full scope of your losses.
How Do Property Owners and Insurers Fight Slip and Fall Claims?
Property owners rarely accept responsibility without a fight. Their insurance companies employ trained adjusters whose job is to reduce or deny claims. Recognizing these strategies helps you protect the value of your claim from the beginning.
Common Defenses Property Owners Raise
Insurance companies and property owners rely on a predictable set of arguments to avoid paying slip and fall claims, including the following:
- “The hazard was open and obvious”: The property owner argues that the danger was so visible that any careful person would have avoided it. This defense does not always succeed, especially when distractions, poor lighting, or the nature of the hazard itself made it difficult to see.
- “The injured person was not paying attention”: Adjusters look for evidence that the victim was on their phone, carrying items that blocked their view, or walking too quickly. They use this argument to shift fault under Colorado’s comparative negligence rule.
- “The condition existed for only a short time”: Property owners argue they had no reasonable opportunity to discover or fix the hazard. Countering this defense requires evidence showing the timeline of the condition, such as surveillance footage or cleaning schedules.
- “The injury was pre-existing”: Insurers review medical history looking for prior complaints about the same body part. Consistent medical documentation linking the fall to specific new injuries helps counter this argument.
Each of these defenses aims to reduce the property owner’s share of fault or eliminate liability entirely.
What Evidence Matters Most in a Greenwood Village Slip and Fall Case?
Property owners control most of the records relevant to a slip and fall claim, and some of those records have short retention periods. Acting quickly to identify and preserve key documentation gives a claim the strongest possible foundation.
Records That Reveal What the Property Owner Knew
Maintenance and inspection logs show how frequently the property was checked and whether the owner followed a consistent schedule. Cleaning records from the day of the fall may indicate whether the area was serviced before the injury. Prior incident reports from the same location demonstrate that the owner already knew about recurring hazards.
Additional evidence strengthens the overall picture:
- Surveillance camera footage: Many DTC office buildings, parking garages, and retail stores record continuously. This footage may show how long the hazard existed before the fall.
- Photographs taken at the scene: Images of the hazard, lighting conditions, and the surrounding area preserve details that change quickly after a fall.
- Witness contact information: Other visitors, tenants, or employees who noticed the hazard or witnessed the fall provide testimony that supports the timeline and circumstances of the claim.
Our team acts quickly to request preservation of evidence as one of the first steps in every fall injury investigation.
Act Before Key Evidence Is Lost
Surveillance footage and maintenance records may not be kept for long. Early action helps preserve what your claim needs.
Call (303) 351-2567 to get started.
What Is the Filing Deadline for a Greenwood Village Slip and Fall Claim?
Colorado law sets a two-year deadline for most slip and fall claims under C.R.S. §13-80-102. This statute of limitations in personal injury claim begins running on the date of the injury.
Two years sounds like a reasonable amount of time, but the window narrows quickly. Medical treatment often lasts months. Insurance negotiations take time. And the evidence needed to prove a claim degrades well before the deadline arrives.
Why Early Investigation Matters in Fall Cases
Security camera footage may be recorded over within 30 to 90 days. Cleaning logs and inspection records rotate out of active files. Witnesses who saw the hazard before your fall may move, change jobs, or forget key details.
Our Greenwood Village office is close to most DTC properties where fall injuries occur. That proximity allows our team to investigate conditions quickly and interview witnesses while their memories are fresh.
FAQ for Greenwood Village Slip and Fall Claims
What if I fell, but no one else saw it happen?
A lack of eyewitnesses does not prevent a claim from moving forward. Medical records documenting the injury, photographs of the hazard, surveillance footage, and your own detailed account of the incident may all support the claim. Many successful fall cases rely on circumstantial evidence rather than witness testimony.
What if the property is owned by a large corporation or management company?
Many commercial properties in the Denver Tech Center are owned by investment groups, managed by third-party companies, and leased to individual tenants. Our team investigates ownership and management structures to identify every party that may bear responsibility for the unsafe condition.
Do slip and fall injuries qualify for compensation if I was wearing inappropriate footwear?
Footwear choice is one factor that insurance companies raise to argue comparative fault. Wearing sandals on an icy sidewalk, for example, may reduce the property owner’s share of liability. However, inappropriate footwear alone does not defeat a claim if the property owner failed to address a dangerous hazard.
What types of injuries commonly result from slip and fall accidents?
Falls frequently produce hip fractures, wrist fractures, head injuries, spinal compression injuries, and torn ligaments. From a legal perspective, injuries requiring surgery or long-term rehabilitation typically carry higher claim values due to the documented medical costs involved.
What if I signed a waiver before entering the property?
Liability waivers may limit claims in some recreational or voluntary activity settings. However, waivers do not automatically protect property owners from liability for all negligent conditions. The enforceability of a waiver depends on its language, the circumstances, and whether the specific hazard fell within its scope.
Talk to Our Greenwood Village Slip and Fall Lawyers

Falling on someone else’s property leaves you dealing with pain, medical appointments, and questions about whether anyone is responsible. Those questions have answers, and getting them does not require a commitment or an upfront payment.
Legal Help in Colorado offers free consultations from our Greenwood Village office, available 24 hours a day. We work on a contingency fee basis, meaning we collect nothing unless we recover compensation for you.
Contact our team or call (303) 529-3333 to discuss your claim.
Visit Our Office in Greenwood Village, Colorado
We are conveniently located near Denver Tech Center at:
8480 E Orchard Rd # 2400
Greenwood Village, CO 80111