COLORADO DIVISION OF WATER RESOURCES GWS-78 (11/2011 ...-2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the GWS-78 application in our editor.
  2. Begin by entering your permit number if you have an existing permitted well. This is crucial for processing your application.
  3. Fill in the applicant information section, including your name, mailing address, and contact details. Ensure accuracy for effective communication.
  4. Indicate the location of your property by providing details such as county, section, range, and township. This helps in identifying the jurisdiction.
  5. Answer whether your property will be served by a domestic water system that serves more than three single-family dwellings. If yes, you do not qualify for this permit.
  6. Describe your rooftop precipitation collection system clearly. Remember that usage is limited to what is allowed by your existing well permit.
  7. Sign or enter the names of those submitting the application along with the date. This confirms that all information provided is accurate.

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Well permits are issued by the Colorado Division of Water Resources. (A licensed well driller should be contacted to obtain a permit to drill a well through the Colorado Division of Water Resources.)
The application fee is $25. Be sure to also complete a Well Registration form along with your permit application. Class B wells are capable of pumping between 200 and 600 gpm. The permit application fee is $50.
Domestic and Livestock Wells These types of well permits are issued on tracts of land of 35 acres or more where the proposed well will be the only well on the tract, or on tracts of land of less than 35 acres in limited areas of the state where the surface drainage system is not over-appropriated (see glossary term,
The application fee is $75. These applications are subject to a public hearing to be considered for approval. You are not required to attend the hearing. Be sure to include a completed Well Registration form along with your permit application.
Information on all registered well permits can be found through our Well Permit Search Tool and our Map Viewer Tools that are linked on this page. The well permit file will contain the allowable uses of the well, the original permit application, and any available well construction and pump installation records.
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Housed within the Colorado Department of Natural Resources, the Colorado Division of Water Resources, which includes the State Engineer, division engineers and water commissioners, has the authority to administer all surface water and Denver Basin, tributary and nontributary groundwater in the state of Colorado.
Prior to drilling a ground water well in Colorado, you must have a permit from the Colorado Division of Water Resources, also known as the State Engineers Office. Most private domestic wells in Colorado are exempt from administration in the priority system and do not require augmentation.
For over 125 years, the Division of Water Resources (DWR), directed by the State Engineer, has been empowered to administer all water rights ing to the Prior Appropriation Doctrine (in short, 1st in time, 1st in right).

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