Nunn is a small Weld County town where the directory's heaviest category is general contractors at four listings, followed by farms at three. Our total here is 43 businesses in a single ZIP code, which puts Nunn firmly in the small-rural-community tier of the directory. Most of the listings represent the practical needs of an agricultural town on the eastern Colorado plains.
The top of the category mix reads as expected for the geography. Four general contractors and three farms anchor the directory. Below them, the spread is thin and varied. One gas station, one high school, one HVAC contractor, one museum, one park, and one real-estate listing. That kind of distribution is typical for a town where most categories show up as a single operator and the local economy hinges on a handful of trades plus the agricultural base that surrounds it.
The farm count matters for context here. Three farms in the directory does not capture the full agricultural footprint of the area. Weld County sits in one of the most productive farming and ranching belts in Colorado, and many operations in surrounding unincorporated areas would not show up under a Nunn ZIP. The three listed farms suggest a working agricultural economy, but the broader rural-services pattern, including farm-equipment dealers, feed suppliers, and ag-related contractors, often serves multiple small towns from a larger nearby hub.
For trades work, the small local pool means most service calls will likely draw from operators in larger nearby markets. Drive-time and trip-charge fees are common in this kind of geography. Colorado typically requires plumbing and electrical contractors to hold state licenses, with status verifiable through the Department of Regulatory Agencies. General contractors in Colorado are usually licensed at the local or county level rather than the state level, so check with Weld County for current registration status before signing a contract for any major work.
The presence of a high school and a museum, even at one listing each, is worth flagging for a town this size. Both tend to indicate a community with an institutional core beyond pure agricultural function, and a settled long-term residential pattern rather than a transient or service-camp economy. The single park listing and the absence of a restaurant cluster in the top tier suggest a town where most dining and leisure activity routes to either Greeley or one of the smaller nearby towns rather than living within Nunn itself.