Canyon Title
Friday, November 28, 2025
Authors Posts by Canyon Title

Canyon Title was founded in 2001 and became a Boston National Title Agency in 2015. Canyon has offices in downtown Cherry Creek, Downtown Denver, the Denver Tech Center in Greenwood Village, Fort Collins, Golden, Greeley, and Westminster.  The company currently claims 3% of the Colorado market share.  Boston National is among the nation's leading independent title services providers with more than 150 clients — including master services agreements with four of the top 10 lenders — 200 employees and nine full-service offices.

Canyon Title Bank Fraud Webinar

Denver Area Family Avoids $513,910 Mortgage Fraud Scam

National
Canyon Title Inc., a Boston National Company, announced today they will be co-hosting a webinar with fraud prevention expert Tom Cronkright, CEO of CertifID. The webinar, "To Catch A Fraudster," is scheduled for April 14th at 11 a.m. Eastern/9 a.m.
CanyonTitlewebsite

Canyon Title Partners with Moving Concierge Firm MooveGuru to Launch Canyon Concierge

National
Canyon Title Inc, a Boston National Company, announced the launch of Canyon Concierge today. This automated program, powered by MooveGuru, Inc., allows Canyon Title representatives and their agents to provide their customers with exclusive

Business Real Estate Press Releases

Coastal Millwork, Risley Padula Construction become first tenants at Blue Clay...

On Wednesday, November 19, New Hanover County’s Blue Clay Business Park officially welcomed its first occupants to the complex. Coastal Millwork Supply Co. and its sister company, Risley Padula Construction Inc., held an open house at the companies’ newly finished 68,000-square-foot facility.

Recent Gov & Nonprofit Real Estate Press Releases

Rep. Cavitt introduces flexibility plan for local parks and recreation boards

State Rep. Cam Cavitt today announced a new legislative plan to add additional layers of flexibility for governance rules that apply to local parks and recreation boards. The legislation would allow counties with populations under 100,000 to reduce the size of their parks and recreation boards from 10 members to 7, saving potentially thousands of dollars in overhead costs each year.