Medical records request

How to request your medical records in Colorado

You have a federal right to a copy of your own medical records, in Colorado and everywhere else. Below is how that right works, what Colorado adds on top of it, and a free letter you can fill out and send.

Your federal right (applies in every state)

Under the HIPAA Privacy Rule (45 CFR 164.524), you can get a copy of your own medical records without giving a reason. A provider must act on your request within 30 days, can take one 30-day extension only with written notice, and can charge only a reasonable, cost-based fee for copying and postage.

What Colorado adds

Copy fees
State law defines a reasonable copy fee as no more than $18.53 for the first 10 pages, $0.85 per page for the next 30 pages, and $0.57 per page thereafter (or $1.50 per page for microfilm); these amounts are adjusted periodically. A provider may not charge any fee just to inspect your records.
Worth knowing
For mental-health records, the provider may release a summary rather than the full record to the patient on written request after treatment has ended.
The law
Colo. Rev. Stat. § 25-1-802 (Patient records in custody of individual health-care providers)

When Colorado law and the federal HIPAA rule differ, the one that gives you more access — faster turnaround, lower fee — is the one that applies. This is general information, not legal advice; confirm specifics with your provider's records office.

Your Colorado records-request letter

Whose records are these?
Patient details
Where to send the request

If we have a verified rule for that state, the letter references it alongside your federal HIPAA right.

Which records?
Format and delivery

Leave any field blank and the letter prints a fill-in line you can complete by hand. We generate the PDF and send it back — we don't save it, log it, or keep anything you type here.

Requesting records in Colorado — common questions

How do I request my medical records in Colorado?
Under your federal right of access (HIPAA, 45 CFR § 164.524), you can get a copy of your own records from any provider in Colorado. Send a written request — the free letter on this page works — to the provider's Health Information Management or Release of Information office, or use their patient portal if they have one.
How much can a provider in Colorado charge for copies of my records?
State law defines a reasonable copy fee as no more than $18.53 for the first 10 pages, $0.85 per page for the next 30 pages, and $0.57 per page thereafter (or $1.50 per page for microfilm); these amounts are adjusted periodically. A provider may not charge any fee just to inspect your records. HIPAA separately caps any fee at a reasonable, cost-based charge for the labor of copying and the postage — whichever protects you more applies.
Is this records-request letter free?
Yes. The generator builds a HIPAA records-request letter you can download and print for free. Nothing you type is saved or sent to anyone but you.

What we will never do with your records

This generator runs without an account, and KeptWell itself makes the same promises to every family, regardless of plan or price.

We won't sell your data.
Not to advertisers, not to data brokers, not to insurers, not to pharma, not to anyone, in any form, ever.
We won't train AI models on your records.
Anthropic (whose Claude model powers KeptWell) is contractually prohibited from training on anything we send them, under a signed Business Associate Agreement.
We won't lock you in.
You can export everything in your circle as a ZIP at any time. Cancellation is one click.

Read the full data practices →

Once your Colorado records arrive, give them a home.

They usually come back as a stack of PDFs or a disc. Upload them to KeptWell and it reads each one, organizes everything by type and date, and lets your whole family ask questions about it. The medical record organizer that does the organizing. Free today.

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