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Side-by-side · COKS

Colorado vs Kansas — ATV / UTV / OHV laws compared

Side-by-side comparison of Colorado and Kansas ATV / UTV / OHV rules: registration, title, helmet, minimum age, supervision, and out-of-state reciprocity. Useful when trailering across the state line.

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Side-by-side rule comparison

RuleCOColoradoKSKansas
Registration requiredYesNo
Title requiredRequiredNot required
Fee
Renewal cycle
Nonresident permitRequiredSee note
Helmet tierUnder 18None
Eye protectionVaries / unverifiedVaries / unverified
Min age unsupervised16No codified minimum
Supervised-minor age10
Safety courseVaries / unverifiedVaries / unverified
Private-land carveoutVaries / unverifiedYes

Cross-state questions

The questions riders typically ask before crossing the Colorado Kansas line — each answer derived directly from the rule data above.

Can I ride my Colorado-registered ATV in Kansas without re-registering?
Kansas's rule on out-of-state riders: K.S.A. §8-128 exempts ATVs from state registration on both private and public property; a KDWP permit is required for state-park trails. If you ride a Colorado-registered machine, this is the rule that decides whether you need a nonresident permit, a temporary registration, or nothing beyond your home-state paperwork.
Can I ride my Kansas-registered ATV in Colorado without re-registering?
Colorado's rule on out-of-state riders: All in-state and out-of-state OHVs must be registered with Colorado Parks and Wildlife and display a current sticker on designated trails or staging areas. If you ride a Kansas-registered machine, this is the rule that decides whether you need a nonresident permit, a temporary registration, or nothing beyond your home-state paperwork.
Do helmet rules differ between Colorado and Kansas?
Helmet rules differ. Colorado requires a helmet only for riders under 18. Kansas has no codified statewide helmet requirement for ATVs. The per-state page lists any narrower carveouts (private property, supervised minors, eye-protection rules).
What is the minimum unsupervised ATV riding age in Colorado vs Kansas?
Colorado: 16 is the minimum unsupervised operating age. Kansas does not codify a single statewide unsupervised-rider age (private-land or DNR-rule-specific limits may still apply). A separate "supervised-minor" age governs riding under direct adult supervision — check each state's full page for the lower bound.

Reciprocity rules in detail

How each state treats out-of-state riders — the rule that decides whether you need a nonresident permit, a temporary registration, or nothing beyond your home-state paperwork.

COColorado

All in-state and out-of-state OHVs must be registered with Colorado Parks and Wildlife and display a current sticker on designated trails or staging areas.

KSKansas

K.S.A. §8-128 exempts ATVs from state registration on both private and public property; a KDWP permit is required for state-park trails.

The comparison above is the trip-planning summary — each state has a dedicated page with sources, official DNR links, and every rule spelled out.

Topic guides

Reference explainers and typologies that sit alongside the per-axis state atlases — vehicle category, where you can ride, by rider, and what to check before a trip.

Vehicle category & paperwork

Where you can ride

By rider

Trip planning