Updated June 25, 2026 · Denver tech + DaVita + healthcare admin growth + outdoor-lifestyle WFH appeal.
Cushy WFH insurance remote roles open to applicants based in Colorado.
Most cushy insurance remote jobs are fully remote and US-eligible, so applicants in Colorado qualify for the same listings as anywhere else in the country. We surface listings here that specifically prefer or list Colorado in their applicant criteria, plus the broader US-remote pool. Colorado residents have access to roughly the same applicant pool as the rest of the US — the difference is in state labor laws (pay frequency, sick leave, classification rules) noted below.
Colorado's cushy WFH market is concentrated in Denver (DaVita HQ, UCHealth remote admin, Charter Communications operations, SaaS direct-hire support at Salesforce and Twilio) with secondary hubs in Colorado Springs (federal contractor admin, military-adjacent hiring) and Fort Collins. Colorado has a flat 4.4% state income tax. The Denver metro draws a strong pool of motivated remote workers attracted by outdoor-lifestyle access; employer competition for talent is stronger than in lower-cost states, which supports modestly higher pay rates. Colorado FAMLI (paid family leave) applies to W-2 workers.
No insurance remote openings showing for Colorado right now — check back soon or set an alert below.
Verified listings in this category pay a median of $24/hour, ranging from $19 to $38/hour. Most fully remote roles pay the same nationally regardless of where you live.
Most are open to anyone in the United States. We surface Colorado explicitly when employers list it as a preferred or eligible location.
No — most cushy WFH listings are open to all 50 states. Listings tagged "Colorado" usually mean the employer prefers Colorado residents (sometimes for tax/payroll reasons) but will still hire from neighboring states. Check each posting.
For agent / sales roles: yes — typically a state P&C (Property & Casualty) license, sometimes life/health. Most major carriers (Allstate, Progressive, USAA) pay for your study materials, exam fees, and training time as a new hire — you don't pay for licensing yourself.
Licensed claims adjuster pays $24–$36/hr, a notch above general customer service ($19–$26). Both pay above the broader cushy WFH average. Licensed sales agents on commission can exceed $40/hr equivalent in good months but with quota pressure that cushy seekers often want to avoid.