Oregon Property Tax Calculator
Calculate property taxes in Oregon. OR effective property tax rate is 0.87% with a median home value of $480,000. Includes OR assessment ratios and exemptions.
Oregon at a Glance
$480,000
Median Home Price
0.87%
Property Tax Rate
$1,400
Avg Home Insurance
$472,030
FHA Loan Limit
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Reviewed & Methodology
Every calculator is built using industry-standard formulas, validated against authoritative sources, and reviewed by a credentialed financial professional. State-specific data is sourced from official government publications.
Property Tax Calculator in Oregon
The median home price in Oregon is $480,000, which is 14% above the national average of $420,000. Oregon's effective property tax rate of 0.87% is 0.23 percentage points lower than the national average of 1.1%.
| Metric | Oregon (OR) | National Avg | vs National Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $480,000 | $420,000 | +14% |
| Property Tax Rate | 0.87% | 1.1% | -0.23% |
| Home Insurance (Annual) | $1,400 | $2,300 | -39% |
| State Sales Tax | 0% | 5% | -5.0% |
| FHA Loan Limit | $472,030 | $472,030 | Standard |
| Conforming Loan Limit | $766,550 | $766,550 | Standard |
Homeownership in Oregon
Oregon's housing market is split between the expensive Portland metro (where median prices exceed $500,000) and the more affordable Willamette Valley, coast, and eastern Oregon. Oregon has no sales tax and no property tax on assessed growth above a 3% cap for most residential properties under Measure 5 and 47 limits. However, Oregon's income tax is among the highest in the country at up to 9.9%, and the Portland metro has faced significant challenges around livability that have impacted demand.
Tips for Oregon Homebuyers and Homeowners
- Oregon's property tax system caps annual increases in assessed value (MAV -- Maximum Assessed Value) at 3% per year, but the MAV can be substantially lower than real market value for long-term owners -- meaning a sale triggers a 'reset' to full RMV.
- No state sales tax is a significant ongoing benefit -- Oregonians effectively save 7-9% on every major purchase versus neighboring Washington or California, which compounds significantly over years of homeownership.
- Oregon has a very high income tax (9.9% top bracket) with no standard deduction aligned to federal levels -- high earners should carefully model after-tax income before relocating.
- Portland's urban growth boundary (UGB) limits sprawl, which has historically kept land prices elevated in the metro -- rural properties outside the UGB offer more land for the money but fewer services.
Oregon Programs and Assistance
- Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS) Oregon Bond Residential Loan Program -- below-market rate mortgages for first-time buyers, with income and purchase price limits by county.
- Down Payment Assistance (DPA) Program through OHCS -- provides up to $15,000 in a 0% interest deferred loan for down payment and closing costs.
- Oregon Individual Development Account Initiative (IDA) -- matched savings account program where low-income buyers can accumulate matched savings for homeownership goals.
Did you know? Oregon has no sales tax but a 9.9% top income tax rate -- the state's revenue mix is unusual among western states, and the absence of sales tax on major purchases like vehicles, appliances, and building materials provides meaningful savings for homeowners over time.