Eighty separate business license filings landed in Denver's municipal database under the name Keyrenter Denver between April 30, 2028, and March 1, 2030. This concentrated burst of administrative activity marks a significant period of operational expansion for the property management firm within city limits.
For residents in neighborhoods like Highland and LoHi, where the company manages rental stock, these filings represent the behind-the-scenes mechanics of the local housing market. The volume of updates suggests a dynamic portfolio that requires frequent regulatory adjustments, from new property acquisitions to changes in ownership structures.
The data shows a steady stream of entries rather than a single bulk filing. The earliest record in this set, dated April 30, 2028, initiated a two-year cycle of updates. By May 8, 2028, another entry appeared, followed by filings in August 2028 and early 2029. The pace accelerated in the summer of 2029, with multiple updates recorded in April, May, and August.
Specific addresses anchor these administrative moves. On August 7, 2029, a residential rental property license was issued for the address at 1600 W 32nd Ave in the Highland neighborhood, managed by Scholten Enterprises, LLC. This specific filing sits within a broader pattern of updates that continued through the end of 2029, including entries in November and February 2030. Each update, whether labeled as a new data entry or a general database refresh, adds a layer to the company's footprint. The filings from late 2029 and early 2030, such as the update on February 19, 2030, align with previous data entries for 2025-BFN-0016970 and earlier updates from November 2029.
This frequency of filings is unusual for a single entity over such a short window. Most local businesses file for initial licensure once and renew annually. Keyrenter's pattern of 80 filings in 24 months indicates either aggressive growth, a complex multi-entity structure, or a shift in how the city processes its rental property data. The concentration of activity in 2029 suggests a peak period of acquisition or restructuring.
City officials will continue to monitor these records as part of the standard annual review process. Residents can track future movements through the city's open data portal, which will reflect any new filings or status changes as they occur. The next major update cycle will likely align with the standard renewal period for the properties managed by Scholten Enterprises, LLC.