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Harney County Oregon
Harney County · Oregon

Harney County Landlord-Tenant Law

Oregon landlord guide — Burns, Hines, high desert basin & ORS Chapter 90

🏛️ County Seat: Burns
👥 Population: ~7,500
⚖️ State: OR

Landlord-Tenant Law in Harney County, Oregon

Harney County is the largest county in Oregon and the largest county in the contiguous United States west of the Mississippi River, covering over 10,000 square miles of the Great Basin high desert. Its approximately 7,500 residents are distributed across a landscape of vast alkali flats, sagebrush rangelands, mountain ranges, and shallow wetland basins — most notably the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, one of the most important migratory bird habitats in North America. The county’s economy is built on cattle ranching, federal land management, healthcare, county government, and the limited retail and services that support a regional center far from any major urban area. Burns, the county seat, and the immediately adjacent city of Hines together constitute the only significant population center in the county.

The residential rental market in Harney County is among the smallest and most affordable in Oregon, with Fair Market Rents for a two-bedroom unit among the lowest of any county in the state. All landlord-tenant matters are governed by ORS Chapter 90, with eviction actions filed in the Harney County Circuit Court in Burns. No local rent control exists in any Harney County community.

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📊 Harney County Quick Stats

County Seat Burns
Population ~7,500
Largest City Burns (~2,700)
Median Rent ~$750–$950 (among lowest in Oregon)
County Area ~10,000 sq mi (largest in lower 48 west of Mississippi)
Rent Control State stabilization only (ORS 90.323)
Landlord Rating 4/10 — Extreme isolation, very thin market

⚖️ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 72-Hour Pay-or-Vacate (ORS 90.394)
Lease Violation / Cause 30-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate (ORS 90.392)
Extreme Violations 24-Hour Notice (ORS 90.396)
Month-to-Month (<1 yr) 30 Days Written Notice
Month-to-Month (1+ yr) 90 Days + Qualifying Reason
Court Harney County Circuit Court
Avg Timeline 4–8 weeks (uncontested)

Harney County Local Ordinances

County and city-specific rules that apply alongside Oregon state law

Category Details
Rental Registration No rental registration or landlord licensing requirement in Harney County, Burns, or Hines as of 2026. ORS Chapter 90 disclosure requirements apply — landlords must provide tenants with the name and address of the property owner or authorized manager and the person authorized to receive service of process at the start of each tenancy.
Rent Control / Stabilization No local rent control. Oregon’s statewide stabilization under ORS 90.323 applies — annual increases capped at 7% + CPI, with 90 days’ notice for increases under 10% and 180 days for 10% or more. New construction (certificate of occupancy within 15 years) is exempt. At Harney County’s rent levels — among the lowest in Oregon — the stabilization cap is essentially never a binding constraint on market decisions.
Just-Cause Eviction Oregon’s statewide just-cause protections under ORS 90.427 apply. After one year of month-to-month tenancy, landlords must provide a qualifying reason to terminate and pay one month’s relocation assistance. In Harney County’s housing market, a displaced tenant may have extremely limited options within any reasonable distance — the practical weight of just-cause protections is significant even when not legally contested.
Federal Land & BLM Presence The Bureau of Land Management oversees vast portions of Harney County’s public land and maintains a significant district office presence in Burns. BLM range conservationists, wildlife biologists, range technicians, and administrative staff represent some of the county’s most stable employment. The Malheur National Wildlife Refuge (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service) adds another federal employment tier. Federal employees assigned to Burns/Hines represent excellent rental prospects — professionally employed, stable income, often relocating for multi-year assignments.
Burns Paiute Tribe The Burns Paiute Tribe maintains a federally recognized tribal entity and the Burns Paiute Indian Colony near Burns. Tribal government employment represents another stable local employer. Tribal members and employees represent a portion of the local rental market tenant pool and are subject to the same ORS Chapter 90 protections as all Oregon tenants.
Security Deposits No statutory cap in Oregon. Return within 31 days with written itemized accounting (ORS 90.300). Double damages plus attorney fees for wrongful withholding. In a county of 7,500 people where Burns and Hines together represent nearly all rental housing, a landlord’s reputation for fair deposit handling is community-wide knowledge. Document every move-in and move-out thoroughly.
Rental Assistance & Court Access Rental assistance notice required with every 72-hour nonpayment notice (ORS 90.395). Oregon 211 and Harney County Human Services are the primary referral resources. Eviction actions are filed in the Harney County Circuit Court in Burns. The court handles a low volume of landlord-tenant matters; precise procedural compliance with ORS Chapter 90 is essential, and landlords should consult a licensed Oregon attorney before initiating any proceedings.

Last verified: April 2026 · Source: ORS Chapter 90

🏛️ Courthouse Information

Where landlords file eviction actions in Harney County

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Oregon

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Harney County eviction

💰 Eviction Costs: Oregon
Filing Fee $88-270
Total Est. Range $200-600
Service: — Writ: —

Oregon Eviction Laws

ORS Chapter 90 statutes, notice requirements, and landlord rights that apply in Harney County

⚡ Quick Overview

10
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
30
Days Notice (Violation)
30-60
Avg Total Days
$$88-270
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 10-Day Notice of Nonpayment (or 13-Day if served on day 5)
Notice Period 10 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes
Days to Hearing 7-14 days
Days to Writ 4 days
Total Estimated Timeline 30-60 days
Total Estimated Cost $200-600
⚠️ Watch Out

CRITICAL: 4-day grace period before notice can be served. 10-day notice can only be served on or after 8th day of rental period. 13-day notice can be served on or after 5th day. Must include mandatory Eviction for Nonpayment of Rent notice per HB 2001 (2023) with rental assistance info in multiple languages - court dismisses without it. Accepting partial rent may invalidate notice. Court MUST dismiss FED if tenant pays all rent or rental assistance is received before judgment. Statewide rent control (SB 608): 7%+CPI cap (max 10% per SB 611). Just cause eviction required after first year of occupancy.

Underground Landlord

📝 Oregon Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Circuit Court - FED (Forcible Entry and Detainer). Pay the filing fee (~$$88-270).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Oregon eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Oregon attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Oregon landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Oregon — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Oregon's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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⏱ Notice Period Calculator

Calculate your required notice period and earliest filing date

📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
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🏙️ Communities in Harney County

Incorporated communities within this county

📍 Harney County at a Glance

Oregon’s largest county by area — and the largest county in the lower 48 west of the Mississippi — with ~7,500 residents concentrated in Burns and Hines. BLM, Fish & Wildlife, and the Burns Paiute Tribe anchor the local economy alongside ranching. Rents are among the lowest in Oregon. Extreme isolation demands local presence and local relationships. No local rent control.

Harney County

Screen Before You Sign

Verify income at 3x rent. BLM district employees, USFWS refuge staff, Harney District Hospital healthcare workers, Harney County government employees, and Burns Paiute tribal government workers are the most reliable profiles. Local ranching families with long-term community ties are also strong candidates. In a county this small and remote, one bad tenancy affects your entire local reputation. Consult an Oregon attorney before any legal action.

Run a Tenant Background Check →

A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Harney County, Oregon

Harney County is, by any measure, one of the most extraordinary places in the American West. At over 10,000 square miles, it is larger than Massachusetts and Connecticut combined — the largest county in the lower 48 states west of the Mississippi River — and it is home to approximately 7,500 people. That works out to roughly 0.7 people per square mile, a density that qualifies as frontier by any reasonable definition. The landscape is the high desert basin and range country of the northern Great Basin: vast alkali playas, sagebrush seas, fault-block mountain ranges rising abruptly from the flats, and at the center, the Blitzen Valley and the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge — a 187,000-acre federal reserve that attracts hundreds of thousands of migratory birds and the birders and naturalists who follow them.

Burns and Hines: The Desert Community

Burns and Hines sit adjacent to each other in the Silvies Valley, roughly equidistant from every edge of the county’s vast territory. Burns, with approximately 2,700 residents, is the county seat, the commercial center, the healthcare hub, and the location of county government. Hines, immediately to the west, is a smaller incorporated city that functions as an extension of the Burns community rather than a distinct market. Together, they constitute virtually the entire conventional rental inventory in Harney County. The nearest cities of any comparable size — Bend, Ontario, Lakeview — are each more than two hours away by road. This isolation is the defining fact of life in Burns, and it is the defining fact of the rental market as well.

Rents in Burns and Hines are among the lowest in Oregon, reflecting both the county’s relative remoteness and the limited income levels of the local workforce economy. Fair Market Rents for a two-bedroom unit rank in the bottom tier of all 36 Oregon counties. Acquisition prices for residential rental properties are correspondingly modest — a landlord can enter this market at a cost per unit that would be unimaginable in Bend or Portland. The operational challenge is not acquisition price or even rent collection; it is the extreme isolation that makes maintenance, vacancy management, and tenant sourcing more demanding than any dollar figure can capture.

The Federal Employer Foundation

The Bureau of Land Management’s Burns District manages millions of acres of public land across Harney County and maintains a significant office presence in Burns. BLM range conservationists, archaeologists, wildlife biologists, range technicians, law enforcement rangers, and administrative staff represent the single most financially stable employment sector in the county. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service manages the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge with a permanent staff of refuge biologists, managers, and support personnel. These federal employees earn federal wages, carry federal benefits, and often accept multi-year assignments to remote field stations — they are the prototype of the reliable, professionally employed tenant who is motivated to maintain stable housing in a community far from alternatives.

Harney District Hospital provides healthcare employment that anchors another stable tenant segment. Recruiting healthcare professionals to Burns is a persistent challenge for the hospital — an amenity-poor, extremely remote location is not an easy sell for physicians and specialists accustomed to urban or suburban practice environments. Those who do accept positions at Harney District typically commit for meaningful periods, however, and a nurse or physician recruited to Burns needs housing immediately upon arrival in a community where the housing stock is limited and professional property management resources are essentially nonexistent.

The Burns Paiute Tribe and Ranching Economy

The Burns Paiute Tribe, whose ancestors inhabited the Malheur Lake basin for generations before being forcibly removed following the Bannock War of 1878, maintains a federally recognized presence through the Burns Paiute Indian Colony near Burns. Tribal government employment, social services administration, and the tribe’s land management activities create local jobs and contribute to the rental market tenant pool. The ranching economy — cattle operations on both private and leased BLM land — employs ranch hands, feedlot workers, and agricultural support workers whose income levels and employment stability vary significantly with commodity markets and operational scale.

Oregon Law at the Edge of the Map

ORS Chapter 90 applies in full in Harney County. The distance from Portland or Salem does not diminish any legal obligation. The 72-hour nonpayment notice must include rental assistance contact information (ORS 90.395) — Oregon 211 and Harney County Human Services are the appropriate references. The just-cause framework protects tenants after year one of month-to-month tenancy — a protection with particular force in a community where a displaced tenant may face a housing crisis with no local alternative. Security deposit accounting must be completed within 31 days of move-out with written itemization. And any eviction proceeding must be filed in the Harney County Circuit Court in Burns with full procedural compliance.

For a landlord operating in Harney County, the practical message is the same as it is for every Oregon micro-rural market, amplified by the county’s extraordinary scale and isolation: local presence, local knowledge, and local relationships are not advantages in this market — they are prerequisites. A landlord who cannot personally respond to a maintenance emergency in Burns, who does not have established relationships with local contractors and tradespeople, and who cannot personally manage the tenant relationship is not well-positioned to succeed here, regardless of how attractive the acquisition economics may appear from a distance.

Harney County landlord-tenant matters are governed by ORS Chapter 90, Oregon’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act. Nonpayment notice: 72 hours (ORS 90.394). Lease violation: 30 days with right to cure (ORS 90.392). Extreme violations: 24 hours (ORS 90.396). No-cause termination after 1 year: 90 days + qualifying reason + 1 month relocation assistance (ORS 90.427). Rent stabilization: 7% + CPI annually; 90-day notice for increases under 10% (ORS 90.323). Security deposit return: 31 days (ORS 90.300). Population ~7,500; largest county in the lower 48 west of the Mississippi. No local rent control. Evictions filed in Harney County Circuit Court, Burns. Consult a licensed Oregon attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

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Disclaimer: This page provides general information about landlord-tenant law in Harney County, Oregon and is not legal advice. Laws change frequently. Always verify current requirements with a licensed Oregon attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

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