The Lakewood CO DMV at 1881 Pierce Street is one of the busiest driver license offices in the Denver metro. It handles new licenses, renewals, instruction permits, ID cards, motorcycle endorsements, Real ID upgrades, CDL renewals, and behind-the-wheel road tests โ all under one roof. What it doesn't handle is vehicle registration. That's a separate office. More on that mistake below.
Here's the short version. The office runs Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., with a slightly later opening on Wednesdays at 8:30 a.m. Phone: 303-205-5600. Walk-ins are accepted but the wait can easily stretch past two hours on a Monday morning. Appointments through mydmv.colorado.gov turn that same visit into a 20-minute errand. If your trip is just a renewal and you're under 65, you can probably skip the office entirely using eDriver License online.
This guide walks through what's actually inside the Pierce Street building, what's not, and how to avoid the most common mistake Lakewood residents make โ driving over for a registration renewal and being turned away because vehicle registration sits with Jefferson County Motor Vehicle on Wadsworth, not the state DMV. That split between state and county is the single biggest source of wasted trips in the entire Denver metro.
You'll also find the document list for a Real ID (it's strict โ one missing paper sends you home), the 2026 fee schedule for driver license services, what road tests actually involve at Lakewood specifically, and the timing tricks that locals use to skip the worst of the queue. We'll cover the nearby alternatives too. Sometimes the fastest route to a Colorado license is driving to Northglenn or Boulder instead of waiting at Pierce Street.
One more thing before we get into it. Colorado modernized fast in the last few years. The fee schedule has shifted, Real ID enforcement is fully active at airports as of May 2025, and the state expanded online renewals through age 65 โ meaning many drivers can now go a full decade between in-person visits. The information below reflects rules in effect for 2026. Always confirm fees on the official Colorado DMV site before you go.
Need to study before your knowledge test? Our CO DMV (Colorado Department of Motor Vehicle) Test Guide walks through what's on the 25-question exam, the 80% pass mark, and which sections trip up first-timers the hardest.
Located at 1881 Pierce Street, Lakewood CO 80214. Phone 303-205-5600. State-run office handling licenses, permits, ID cards, Real ID upgrades, motorcycle endorsements, CDL renewals, and road tests. Open Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., with a later 8:30 a.m. opening on Wednesdays for staff training.
Vehicle registration in Lakewood is handled by Jefferson County, not the state DMV. The closest office is on Wadsworth Boulevard, with another in Arvada. Bring proof of insurance, current title or registration, emissions certificate if applicable, and a photo ID. Hours generally Monday-Friday with limited late openings โ confirm online.
Lakewood is inside the enhanced emissions program area. Gas vehicles over 7 model years old must pass an Air Care Colorado emissions test before registration. Tests run about $25 and take 15-20 minutes during off-peak hours. Diesel and electric vehicles are typically exempt.
Several MV Express kiosks operate inside Lakewood-area grocery stores. They handle registration renewals in under 5 minutes, print plate tabs on the spot, and stay open during normal store hours including weekends โ making them faster than any office visit.
Services at the Lakewood CO DMV split into two clean buckets, and knowing which bucket your task falls into saves the wasted trip almost every newcomer eventually makes. The Pierce Street office handles anything that touches your face, your driving privilege, or your ID. Vehicle stuff โ plates, registration, titles โ goes to Jefferson County instead.
What Pierce Street actually does: new driver licenses, license renewals, duplicate licenses for lost cards, instruction permits for teens and adults, Real ID upgrades, identification cards for non-drivers, motorcycle endorsements, address changes, vision screenings, CDL renewals (but not CDL skills testing โ that's farmed out to third-party examiners), reinstatements after suspension, and behind-the-wheel road tests by appointment. The office also accepts surrendered out-of-state licenses for new Colorado residents.
What Pierce Street does not do: vehicle registration, title transfers, license plate issuance, plate replacement, disability placards, lien filings, salvage titles, or anything else attached to a specific car or truck. All of that runs through Jefferson County Motor Vehicle, with the main office on Wadsworth and a satellite in Arvada. Driving to Pierce Street for a registration renewal is the most common mistake, and the front desk redirects multiple people every single day.
For most Lakewood residents the highest-volume transaction is a license renewal. If you're under 65 and your last renewal happened in person, you can almost certainly do this online through eDriver License at mydmv.colorado.gov. The fee is the same $30.87, no photo refresh required this cycle, and the new card arrives in 10 to 14 business days. A printable temporary covers you legally during the wait. After 65, Colorado wants you in the office for a vision check.
New Colorado residents have 30 days to convert an out-of-state driver license and 90 days to register a vehicle. The 30-day window is shorter than most people expect โ and the clock starts the day you sign a lease, take a job, or enroll a child in a Jefferson County school. Penalties for late registration accrue at roughly $25 per month, capped at $100. Late license conversion can mean your insurance carrier denies a claim, which is the more expensive risk.
Motorcycle endorsements at Lakewood require both a written test and a skills test, with the skills test administered by approved third-party rider schools rather than the state office itself. The endorsement fee is $16.81, and most riders complete the MOST (Motorcycle Operator Safety Training) course to skip the skills test entirely. Lakewood writes the endorsement onto your existing license โ you don't get a separate motorcycle card.
If you're converting from a foreign driver's license, Colorado does not have full reciprocity with most countries outside Germany, Taiwan, South Korea, France, and a few others. You'll need both the knowledge test and the road test. Translated documents from a state-approved translator are required for any non-English supporting paperwork. The Pierce Street office sees a high volume of foreign license conversions because of Lakewood's growing international population.
One Pierce Street quirk worth knowing: the office runs a separate queue for ID-only transactions versus full driver license business. If you're picking up an ID card for a non-driving family member โ common for elderly parents who stopped driving but still need TSA-acceptable identification โ ask the front desk to direct you to the shorter ID queue. The wait there is often half of the main line, sometimes more. Most walk-ins don't know to ask.
Lakewood issues first-time driver licenses, renewals, duplicates, and ID cards for residents across Jefferson County and the western Denver metro. First-time applicants take a 25-question written knowledge test in English or Spanish, followed by a vision screening, and then schedule a behind-the-wheel road test separately. Most permits and ID cards are issued same day if all documents pass review.
Renewals can be done online if you renewed in person last cycle, are under 65, have no medical reporting flags, and don't need a Real ID upgrade. Online renewal costs the same $30.87 fee, skips the wait, and mails the new card in 10 to 14 business days. A temporary printable covers you in the meantime. After 65, in-person renewal is required so staff can verify vision and reaction time.
Real ID upgrades happen at the same counter as standard renewals but require a strict document set: one identity proof (passport or birth certificate), one Social Security proof (card, W-2, or 1099), and two residency proofs from different sources dated within the past year. Real ID costs $30.87 plus a tiny $0.04 surcharge โ effectively the same as a standard license. The card carries a small star in the upper corner.
Since May 2025, Real ID is required to board domestic flights or enter federal buildings unless you carry a passport. The Lakewood office issues Real IDs same-day if your documents pass review. Bring originals โ photocopies are not accepted as primary proof. The most common rejection reason is two residency documents from the same source (two Xcel bills, for instance, don't count as two separate proofs).
Knowledge testing happens on a walk-in basis Monday through Friday at Pierce Street. Plan to arrive by 3:30 p.m. โ the last test usually starts around 4:00 p.m. The test is 25 multiple-choice questions, requires 80% to pass, and same-day retakes are allowed. The retake fee is small but most candidates do better waiting a day to restudy weak areas.
Road tests at Lakewood are appointment only โ there are no walk-in slots. Book through mydmv.colorado.gov, and expect slots to open 2 to 4 weeks out. You must bring a registered, insured vehicle with current emissions if required, and your supervising adult must hold a valid Colorado license. Test routes cover residential streets near Pierce, a controlled-access road, parallel parking, and a three-point turn. Most failures involve speed control through residential zones or unsafe lane changes without head checks.
Colorado's eDriver License system at mydmv.colorado.gov handles standard renewals, address changes, duplicate cards, and many ID card transactions entirely online โ for drivers up to age 65. The fee is identical to in-person service, the average completion time is under eight minutes, and the new card mails in 10 to 14 business days. Before driving to Pierce Street, check whether your transaction qualifies. Chances are you can finish it from your phone while drinking coffee.
The Colorado DMV appointment system is the single most underused tool at the Lakewood office. Using it transforms a Pierce Street visit from a half-day ordeal into a 20-minute errand. Appointments are free, can be booked up to 90 days ahead, and lock in a specific 15-minute window that bypasses the walk-in queue completely. Book through mydmv.colorado.gov. The interface is functional but not intuitive โ the trick is to select Lakewood as the office, then filter by service type before viewing available slots.
When the calendar shows nothing available, two tricks usually surface a slot. Check at 11:00 p.m. when the system releases next-day cancellations. Then refresh during business hours when no-shows release as same-day openings. Walking in 15 minutes after opening also catches cancellations because the front desk routinely fills empty slots from the standby queue. Roughly 20% of booked appointments are no-shows. Persistence pays off.
For tasks the system requires in person, prep work matters more than people realize. Pierce Street turns away an estimated 1 in 6 walk-ins for missing or non-conforming documents. The most common reason: two residency documents that came from the same source. A utility bill and a bank statement work. Two Xcel Energy bills don't. The state publishes the full Real ID document matrix online, and reading it before your visit prevents the costliest mistake โ driving across town twice.
Payment policies at Lakewood are simple but catch some residents off guard. The office accepts credit cards, debit cards, and cash โ but not personal checks for license-related fees. Older residents who still write checks for everything occasionally arrive without a backup payment method. ATMs are nearby but cost a small fee. Bring a card.
Wait time patterns at Pierce Street are predictable enough to game. Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. has the shortest historical waits, averaging 31 minutes for walk-ins. The worst windows: Monday mornings (post-weekend rush), Friday afternoons (people trying to fit it in before the weekend), the day after any state or federal holiday, and the final two business days of every month. Avoiding these windows alone cuts your wait by roughly 60%.
If you need help navigating the portal before your visit, our complete CO DMV Website Guide walks through the myDMV.colorado.gov interface, the most useful self-service options, and what to do when the system throws an error mid-transaction. For an even deeper look at booking specifically, the CO DMV Appointment guide covers cancellation tricks and which times of day release the most slots.
For knowledge test preparation, the state Driver Handbook is the only official source but it runs 90 pages and is structured for reference rather than studying. Most successful test takers use the handbook alongside a question bank of practice exams to find weak areas. Plan two to four study sessions of about an hour each across a week, with one full timed practice test the night before. Walking in cold and hoping common sense will carry you through is the fastest path to a retake โ and another trip to Pierce Street.
If Pierce Street's schedule doesn't work, the nearest alternative offices are Denver Central, Northglenn (also reachable at 303-205-5600, same statewide phone system), Englewood, Aurora (303-340-7430), and Boulder (303-441-3360). Some are reliably less busy than Lakewood. Boulder, in particular, tends to have shorter Tuesday and Wednesday waits because its student population skews the busy days toward Friday and Saturday afternoons. Aurora often has same-week appointment availability when Lakewood's calendar is locked out for two or three weeks straight.
One last appointment tip. The system separates appointments by service type โ license renewal, Real ID upgrade, road test, ID card, and so on each have their own slot pool. If your main service shows fully booked, check whether a related service has openings. A duplicate-license slot can sometimes be repurposed at the counter for an in-person renewal, and staff will usually accommodate small mismatches. Just don't book a road test under the wrong category. That'll get you turned away at check-in.
Common questions about the Lakewood CO DMV cluster around a handful of scenarios that trip up first-timers. The most common: can I do everything at Pierce Street? No. Vehicle registration, plates, and titles are at Jefferson County Motor Vehicle on Wadsworth โ about three miles north. Always confirm which office handles your transaction before driving over. The Pierce Street front desk redirects multiple people daily who showed up for plate work.
The second most common question involves payment. Lakewood accepts cards and cash but not personal checks for driver license fees. Bring a card. The Jefferson County office across town does accept checks for registration, which sometimes confuses people who assume both offices work the same way. They don't.
Walk-in versus appointment tradeoffs are worth understanding. Appointments guarantee you get served at your scheduled time even when walk-ins overflow into the parking lot โ but you have to book days or weeks ahead. Walk-ins are available every operating hour, but the wait is unpredictable. Anywhere from 15 minutes on a slow Wednesday to over two hours on a busy Friday. If your schedule is flexible, mid-week mid-morning walk-in often beats the soonest available appointment.
Teenagers preparing for their first license should understand Colorado's graduated driver licensing system. It requires holding a permit for at least 12 months, completing 50 supervised driving hours including 10 at night, and passing both knowledge and skills tests before independent driving. Lakewood issues permits to applicants as young as 15 with a parent or guardian present. The parent signs a financial responsibility affidavit creating legal liability for the teen's driving. That paperwork catches some parents by surprise. Read it before you sign.
Out-of-state license transfers usually skip the knowledge and skills tests if your current license is unexpired. Colorado does require everyone over 21 to pass a vision screening and have a fresh photo taken. The transfer fee matches a renewal โ $30.87 standard, $30.91 for Real ID. Your old license is surrendered and you receive a temporary paper credential while the permanent card mails from Denver. Carry the paper temporary at all times until the real card arrives.
CDL renewals happen at Pierce Street, but CDL skills tests do not. Colorado contracts skills testing to third-party examiners around the region, and scheduling can take three to six weeks. If you need a CDL fast, look at examiners in Brighton or Greeley โ they often have shorter queues than the Jefferson County options. For renewals, bring your current CDL, medical certificate, and all endorsement documentation. Hazmat renewals additionally require a TSA background check that takes 4 to 6 weeks separately.
Behind-the-wheel road tests at Lakewood deserve their own warning. They are appointment-only, no exceptions. The test route runs through residential streets within two miles of Pierce, includes parallel parking, a three-point turn, and a controlled-access road segment. The most common failure reasons: incomplete stops at stop signs (a brief slow-down doesn't count), speed control through residential zones, and improper lane changes without a head check. Practice these specifically. If your supervising adult drives the route once or twice with you in the week before your test, your odds improve noticeably.
If you're studying for the knowledge test, our CO DMV Practice Test PDF works offline โ useful during a commute or lunch break. Colorado tests questions referencing state-specific signs, mountain driving rules, wildlife crossings, and Colorado's open container and DUI laws. None of those appear in generic national question banks. Study Colorado-specific.