HOMELESS BOULDER
Blog
← Home
DOCUMENTS SURVIVAL GUIDE March 27, 2026 7 min read

How to Get a Free State ID in Colorado When You're Homeless

Colorado waives the ID fee entirely for people experiencing homelessness. Here's the step-by-step process in Boulder — including what to do when you have no documents at all.

👤
William Lodge
Lived experience · HomelessBoulder.com

Without an ID, almost nothing else works. You can't open a bank account. You can't get a job. You can't pick up your EBT card. You can't get into many shelters or programs. Getting an ID is not optional — it's the foundation that everything else is built on.

The good news: Colorado waives the cost of a state ID for people experiencing homelessness. The bad news: nobody's going to walk up to you in the park and hand you one. You have to navigate a system that wasn't designed with your situation in mind. This post breaks down exactly how to do it in Boulder.

"An ID is not a luxury. It's the key that unlocks the rest of the system. Getting one needs to be your first priority."

Start Here: Talk to a Case Manager at All Roads

Before you go to the DMV, go to All Roads Shelter at 4869 Broadway and ask to speak with a case manager. This is the single most important step in this entire post.

Case managers at All Roads have helped hundreds of people navigate the exact documentation chain you're facing. They know which fee waivers are available, which offices are most responsive, and how to sequence things so you don't make wasted trips. If you show up to the DMV without the right paperwork, you'll be turned away. A case manager can prevent that.

What case managers at All Roads can help with: Colorado State ID fee waiver letters, birth certificate requests (including out-of-state), Social Security card replacement, and guidance on which documents you actually need for your specific situation.

What Documents You Need for a Colorado State ID

Colorado uses a points-based document system. You need enough documents to reach a minimum points threshold. Here's what the most common combination looks like for someone experiencing homelessness:

Where to Go: Colorado DMV in Boulder

The Boulder DMV office is located at 3400 Arapahoe Ave, Boulder, CO 80303. Make an appointment online at mydmv.colorado.gov — walk-ins are accepted but wait times can be very long. If you can schedule ahead, do it.

💡 Bring everything in a folder. Organize all your documents before you go. The DMV staff will review each one. If a document is missing, you'll need to come back — so double-check with your case manager that you have everything before you make the trip.

What If You Have Absolutely No Documents?

This happens more than people think. Sometimes everything was lost when a camp was swept, or left behind in a situation you had to leave fast, or simply never obtained to begin with. Starting from zero is harder, but it's not impossible.

The path usually goes: get your birth certificate first (your case manager can help request it), then use your birth certificate plus a DHS letter to get your Social Security card replacement, then use both to get your Colorado ID. It takes time — sometimes weeks — but each step unlocks the next.

If you were born in Colorado: Vital records are through Colorado CDPHE. Your case manager can help with the request and the fee.
If you were born in another state: Each state has its own vital records office. Colorado Legal Services can sometimes help with complex out-of-state requests, especially if fees are a barrier.

Using Your New ID

Once you have a Colorado state ID, a lot of doors open at once. You can open a prepaid debit account (helpful for gig app payouts), pick up your EBT card and check your balance at kiosks, access services that require ID, enroll in Medicaid at DHS, and apply for Lifeline phone service (free or low-cost phone through the federal program).

Keep your ID somewhere safe and separate from your other belongings if possible. Replacing it is possible, but takes time and energy you don't want to spend twice.

"Getting your ID isn't just about having a card in your wallet. It's about regaining the ability to participate in systems that everyone else takes for granted."
← Back to all resources