Add a bedroom downstairs without guessing your way through permits, egress, and safety.
First, define what you’re building: “bedroom” has specific triggers
The #1 make-or-break item: egress window sizing (and the window well details)
• Net clear opening: 5.7 sq. ft. (often 5.0 sq. ft. at grade-level conditions)
• Minimum clear opening height: 24 inches
• Minimum clear opening width: 20 inches
• Maximum sill height (to bottom of clear opening): 44 inches above finished floor
• Must be operable from inside without keys/tools/special knowledge
A quick comparison table: “Bedroom-ready” vs. “Future bedroom” layouts
| Item | Bedroom-ready plan (best for ROI + legality) | “Finish now, upgrade later” plan (riskier) |
|---|---|---|
| Egress | Sized and placed correctly from day one | Often skipped; later retrofit can be the biggest cost |
| Electrical/alarms | Designed as sleeping room (smoke/CO placement + power requirements) | May need rework if inspectors require changes for sleeping use |
| HVAC + comfort | Supply/return strategy designed to prevent stuffy, cold rooms | Comfort complaints are common; fixes can be invasive |
| Resale/appraisal language | Clear “bedroom” positioning when permitted + compliant | Often labeled “non-conforming” or “bonus room” |
Did you know? Quick facts Colorado homeowners should plan around
Step-by-step: planning a code-smart basement bedroom addition
1) Confirm ceiling height and obstructions
2) Design egress placement before you design the room
3) Build a moisture plan (Colorado basements still get wet)
4) Plan smoke + carbon monoxide alarms as part of the layout
5) Address ventilation and comfort (so it doesn’t feel like a cave)
6) Pull permits when required—and treat inspections as a checklist, not a surprise
Local angle: what changes across Colorado (Front Range reality)
• Egress window selected but the net clear opening doesn’t actually meet spec after installation details
• Sill height ends up too high after new flooring thickness is added
• Window well drainage not addressed (water and ice issues around wells are common)
• Mechanical room/combustion-air restrictions when a new sleeping room is adjacent to fuel-burning appliances
• “Non-conforming bedroom” confusion during resale due to missing permits or missing egress



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