Contract review in Denver.
Same day. No attorney needed.
Denver attorneys charge $250-$450 per hour. Kontractually reviews the same contract in under 2 minutes - against your playbook, consistently, every time. Tech services agreements, energy contracts, Colorado non-compete compliance, and vendor agreements.
No credit card required. First 3 reviews free.
Same contract review. A fraction of the attorney cost.
- ✗ $250-$450/hr billing rate
- ✗ 3-5 business day turnaround
- ✗ $600-$1,800 per NDA review
- ✗ Inconsistent review standards
- ✗ No playbook customization
- ✓ Flat monthly subscription
- ✓ Results in under 2 minutes
- ✓ Unlimited reviews included
- ✓ Same rules applied every time
- ✓ Fully customizable playbooks
Colorado made sweeping changes to non-compete law in 2022 under the Colorado Restrictive Employment Agreements Act (CREAA). Non-compete agreements are now only enforceable for employees earning above $123,750 per year (threshold adjusts annually) and only to protect trade secrets. Non-solicitation agreements for clients and employees have a lower threshold of approximately $74,250 per year. Agreements must be presented before the employee starts work (or with 14 days notice before signing for existing employees), and the specific reason the restriction is necessary must be stated. Kontractually flags non-compete and non-solicitation clauses in Colorado employment agreements that fail these threshold, timing, and specificity requirements.
Denver attorneys typically charge $250-$450 per hour for commercial contract review. Tech and energy specialists often charge at the higher end. A standard NDA review costs $500-$1,200; a technology services agreement or energy contract review costs $1,500-$5,000. Kontractually's flat monthly subscription covers unlimited reviews - useful for Denver companies in tech, energy, and aerospace managing high volumes of vendor, customer, and partner contracts.
Denver's growing tech sector and established energy industry create a mix of SaaS agreements, professional services contracts, and energy supply or services agreements. Tech contracts commonly have issues with unilateral service modification rights, inadequate data processing terms, and IP ownership gaps for custom development work. Energy contracts often involve force majeure definitions that may not cover supply disruptions, price adjustment mechanisms, and assignment restrictions that complicate financing. Kontractually reviews these against your playbook rules and flags missing protections specific to each contract type.
Colorado's Consumer Protection Act and the Colorado Privacy Act (CPA) create data handling obligations for businesses that process personal data of 100,000 or more Colorado consumers per year, or 25,000 consumers where data is sold. Contracts with data processors must include data processing agreements specifying the nature and purpose of processing, data security requirements, deletion obligations, and support for consumer rights (access, deletion, correction, portability, opt-out). Kontractually flags vendor and service agreements that involve consumer data processing but lack Colorado Privacy Act-compliant data processing terms.
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