Colorado · CO

Medical licensing in Colorado

Getting licensed to practice medicine in Colorado means applying through the Colorado Medical Board, completing primary source verification of your credentials, and then enrolling with payers so you can bill. Here's how it works — and how Rivon handles Colorado licensing and credentialing for you.

How to get licensed in Colorado

  1. 01Confirm eligibility and gather documents — diploma, training verification, exam scores (USMLE/COMLEX), current licenses, DEA, and a complete work history.
  2. 02Submit the application to the Colorado Medical Board, with all fees and supporting documents.
  3. 03Primary source verification — the board confirms your education, training, licensure, board certification, and background (including the NPDB) directly with each source.
  4. 04Board review and issuance — once the file is complete and verified, Colorado issues your license.
  5. 05Enroll with payers and keep the license current — track the renewal cycle and CME so it never lapses.

Licensing board

Colorado Medical Board

The CO board sets Colorado's application, documentation, fees, and renewal requirements.

Typical timeline

~60–120 days

From a complete file to issuance — driven mostly by how fast primary sources respond. A clean, error-free application is the best way to stay near the low end.

How Rivon handles Coloradolicensing & credentialing

On the Rivon platform, your Colorado license, DEA, and board certs live in one record with always-on monitoring that flags every renewal weeks early — so nothing lapses with the Colorado Medical Board. Document AI reads each credential and fills the profile without retyping, and licensing & credentialing pipelines run primary source verification and payer enrollment in parallel.

Prefer to hand it off? Rivon's white-glove team manages the entire Colorado application end to end — gathering documents, completing verification, and shepherding payer enrollment — while you watch progress in real time.

Colorado licensing FAQ

How long does it take to get a medical license in Colorado?

Most Colorado medical license applications take roughly 60–120 days once the Colorado Medical Board has a complete file, though timelines vary with how quickly primary sources (schools, prior boards, the NPDB) respond. Submitting a complete, error-free application is the single biggest way to avoid delays.

Which board issues medical licenses in Colorado?

Medical licenses in Colorado are issued by the Colorado Medical Board, which verifies education, training, exams, and background before granting a license.

Do I need a Colorado license to practice telehealth there?

Generally yes. Licensure follows where the patient is located, so to treat patients in Colorado — including by telehealth — you typically need a Colorado license unless a specific exception applies.

Can Rivon handle Colorado licensing and credentialing for me?

Yes. On the Rivon platform you can track every Colorado license and renewal with always-on monitoring and run credentialing with primary source verification. Or hand it to Rivon's white-glove team, which manages the Colorado application and payer enrollment end to end.

Next step

Get licensed in Colorado — without the busywork.

See how Rivon handles Colorado licensing and credentialing on your own providers. Start free, or book a walkthrough with our white-glove team.

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