Based on public Colorado county records, Dacono's commercial market has recorded 23 qualified sales over the trailing 24 months at a median of $245,000 — an accessible entry point in a Front Range growth corridor with expanding rooftops and rising service demand.
Last updated: June 2026
Get a tailored Dacono commercial market analysis — county records, zoning context, and comparables.
No spam. Your information is never sold.
Dacono's recorded commercial sales reflect a compact but active market: a median price of $245,000 across 23 transactions signals genuine buyer interest at an attainable price point, with upper-range trades near $318,500 pointing to select higher-value assets in this Weld County community.
Commercial / retail / office transactions
Central tendency across recorded transactions
25th-percentile zone of qualified sales
75th-percentile zone of qualified sales
Dacono's commercial demand is primarily a function of its geography — sitting on the most-traveled north-south corridor in Colorado — and its residential growth rate, which is generating consistent demand for neighborhood-serving retail and service businesses.
Dacono's frontage on I-25 provides direct highway access to the entire Denver-Fort Collins metro. This connectivity makes the area attractive for distribution nodes, quick-service retail, and auto-oriented commercial uses that depend on drive-by traffic volumes.
New residential subdivisions approved north and east of Dacono's historic core are adding rooftops at a pace that historically lags commercial supply. Neighborhood-serving retail, medical, and personal service concepts typically follow residential density by 12–36 months.
At a $245,000 median, Dacono commercial assets trade at a meaningful discount to Boulder County and the I-25 primary nodes in Broomfield and Westminster. This spread attracts price-sensitive owner-occupants and smaller regional investors priced out of tighter submarkets.
The broader Weld County industrial market — anchored by Greeley and the I-25/SH-7 area — has seen consistent absorption. Smaller industrial and flex-commercial operators increasingly look south toward Dacono and Firestone as primary nodes tighten and rates rise.
CDOT interchange improvements along the I-25 northern corridor and ongoing U.S. 85 upgrades are enhancing connectivity and reducing friction for commercial users. Infrastructure investment is a historically reliable leading indicator of commercial land value movement.
A meaningful share of Dacono commercial transactions involve owner-occupant buyers — small business operators who purchase rather than lease. This group tends to be less interest-rate sensitive than pure investment buyers, providing demand stability across rate cycles.
Dacono is a market where municipal policy decisions, residential approval pace, and corridor infrastructure timelines have outsized influence on commercial values — more so than in larger, more liquid Front Range cities. Staying current with local planning activity is essential.
The Town of Dacono periodically updates its comprehensive plan, which sets commercial land-use designations and future growth areas. Changes to the plan can create — or eliminate — commercial zoning opportunity at the edges of town. Monitor Town Board agendas and Planning Commission meetings.
Annexations along Dacono's municipal perimeter can dramatically shift the commercial supply-demand balance by adding new entitlement-ready land. Track pending annexation petitions with the Weld County Clerk and Recorder and the Town of Dacono Community Development office.
Commercial absorption in small-growth markets correlates strongly with residential permit counts. A slowdown in new home starts is an early warning signal for commercial demand softening. Weld County building permit data is publicly available and updated monthly.
CDOT's North I-25 program affects access points that directly influence commercial property values in Dacono. Delay or acceleration in interchange construction timelines can move investor expectations — and pricing — ahead of physical completion.
At a $245,000 median price, many Dacono commercial buyers are using SBA or community bank financing. Lending rate movements have a proportionally larger impact on buyer qualification pools in lower-priced markets than in high-value urban submarkets.
As Firestone, Frederick, and the Longmont south-side market tighten, Dacono benefits from spillover demand. Watch pricing trends in those adjacent markets as a leading indicator for Dacono value movement — compression there typically precedes activity here.
Every report starts with public-record data — no estimates, no proprietary black boxes. We pull directly from Weld County assessor and clerk filings, cross-reference zoning records, and synthesize context you can act on.
We review your submitted property address or investment criteria to define the relevant geographic and asset-type scope. No two Dacono analyses are identical — a Highway Commercial parcel requires different comparables than a neighborhood retail strip.
We query the Weld County Assessor and Clerk-and-Recorder databases for arm's-length transfers matching your property type, size class, and sub-area. We flag and exclude non-qualified transactions (family transfers, corrective deeds, foreclosure-adjacent sales) to ensure data integrity.
We cross-reference the property's zoning designation against the Town of Dacono's adopted code and any pending variances, conditional-use permits, or rezoning applications that could affect use or value. Zoning context is often as important as the price line itself.
We situate your property within the broader Dacono and Weld County commercial dataset, identify the most relevant recent sales, and note directional market trends supported by the data — without fabricating price opinions where the data doesn't support them.
You receive a written summary with sourced data tables, comparable sale details, and a clear statement of what the data supports and where uncertainty lies. Follow-up questions are answered by email at no additional charge within the first 30 days.
Market medians tell part of the story. Your specific parcel — its zoning, condition, access, and adjacent development pipeline — tells the rest. Request a tailored report built entirely from public Colorado county records.
Request My Report →Colorado Land Use is an independent Colorado commercial real estate and land-use research resource. We build reports from public county records — transparent, sourced, and free of fabricated estimates.
Submit your property address or investment criteria and we'll deliver a tailored Dacono market analysis: relevant recorded sales, zoning context, and a plain-language interpretation of what the data supports.
Dacono commercial market — property-level analysis, sourced from public records.
Your information is never sold or shared with third parties.