Colorado Springs Minimum Wage 2026

The minimum wage in Colorado Springs is $14.81/hour in 2026. See how it compares to the MIT living wage of $21.00/hour and local cost of living.

Last updated: May 2026 · Data: MIT Living Wage Calculator, C2ER, U.S. Census, BLS, IRS, state and city sources

Minimum Wage Income Calculator

Calculate annual, monthly, and weekly income at any hourly wage in Colorado Springs.

Minimum Wage vs. Living Wage in Colorado Springs

The minimum wage in Colorado Springs is the Colorado statewide rate of $14.81/hour. Colorado Springs does not set a separate city minimum wage, so the Colorado statewide rate (about $14.81 entering 2026 and adjusted each January for inflation) applies. The bigger question for most workers is how that compares to what it actually costs to live in Colorado Springs. With average 1-bedroom rent near $1,350/month and a cost-of-living index of 97 (US average = 100), the gap between the minimum wage and a true living wage is significant.

Benchmark (Colorado Springs, 2026)HourlyAnnual (full-time)
Applicable minimum wage$14.81$30,805
MIT living wage (single adult)$21.00$43,680
MIT living wage (family of four, one earner)$42.50$88,400
Federal minimum wage$7.25$15,080
Average rent (1-bedroom, annual)-$16,200

Living wage figures: MIT Living Wage Calculator for El Paso County. Minimum wage reflects the rate applicable to most private employers in Colorado Springs.

Colorado Springs Cost-of-Living Snapshot (2026)

Colorado Springs sits at the foot of Pikes Peak and is defined by a heavy military and defense presence, including Fort Carson, Peterson and Schriever Space Force Bases, and the U.S. Air Force Academy, along with aerospace, cybersecurity, healthcare, and tourism.

Local MetricColorado Springs (2026 estimate)
Metro population490,000
County / jurisdictionEl Paso County
Cost of living index (US avg = 100)97
MIT living wage, single adult$21.00/hour
MIT living wage, one earner supporting a family of four$42.50/hour
Applicable minimum wage$14.81/hour
Average rent, 1-bedroom$1,350/month
Average rent, 2-bedroom$1,700/month
Median home price$460,000
Median household income$76,000/year
Combined sales tax rate8.2%
Effective property tax rate0.47% of value/year

Local figures are 2026 estimates compiled from the MIT Living Wage Calculator, the C2ER Cost of Living Index, U.S. Census and Zillow housing data, and city and county sources. Verify current figures before relying on them.

Frequently Asked Questions

The minimum wage in Colorado Springs is the Colorado statewide rate of $14.81/hour. Colorado Springs does not set a separate city minimum wage, so the Colorado statewide rate (about $14.81 entering 2026 and adjusted each January for inflation) applies. A full-time worker (40 hours/week, 52 weeks) earns about $30,805 per year gross before taxes at that rate.

Not for a single adult. The MIT Living Wage Calculator estimates a single adult in El Paso County needs about $21.00/hour (roughly $43,680/year) to cover basic costs. That is $6.19/hour above the applicable minimum wage, and a one-earner family of four needs closer to $42.50/hour.

At $14.81/hour, full-time work (2,080 hours/year) produces about $30,805 gross. Part-time at 30 hours/week is roughly $23,104/year. Average 1-bedroom rent in Colorado Springs is about $1,350/month, or $16,200/year.

Colorado Springs does not set a separate city minimum wage, so the Colorado statewide rate (about $14.81 entering 2026 and adjusted each January for inflation) applies.

The federal minimum wage is $7.25/hour and has not changed since 2009. Colorado sets a state minimum wage above the federal floor and adjusts it each January for inflation; Denver and some other localities set even higher local minimums, so the applicable rate applies in Colorado Springs.

Disclaimer: This tool is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, legal, or professional advice. Data is sourced from IRS publications, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and official state sources as of May 2026. Always consult a qualified licensed professional before making financial or legal decisions.