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Marion County Oregon
Marion County · Oregon

Marion County Landlord-Tenant Law

Oregon landlord guide — Salem, Keizer, Woodburn, state capital market & ORS Chapter 90

🏛️ County Seat: Salem
👥 Population: ~346,000
⚖️ State: OR

Landlord-Tenant Law in Marion County, Oregon

Marion County is Oregon’s fifth most populous county, home to approximately 346,000 residents in the heart of the Willamette Valley. Its county seat, Salem, is Oregon’s state capital and third largest city — a government-anchored city of approximately 182,600 with a diversified economy that reaches from state agency employment and healthcare to food processing, higher education, and a large agricultural workforce in the surrounding valley. Salem’s position as the state capital gives its rental market a stability that few Oregon cities of comparable size can match: state government employment does not relocate, does not downsize as dramatically as private industry, and provides the kind of steady, multi-year employment tenure that makes state workers some of the most reliable residential tenants in the state.

The county’s other significant communities — Keizer, Woodburn, Silverton, Stayton, and a collection of smaller agricultural towns — each have distinct characters and market dynamics. Woodburn, with approximately 28,000 residents and a population that is approximately 60% Hispanic, is one of Oregon’s most culturally distinctive small cities and a center for the agricultural labor economy of the northern Willamette Valley. All landlord-tenant matters in Marion County are governed by ORS Chapter 90. No local rent control exists in any Marion County city — Oregon law (ORS 91.225) prohibits local rent control ordinances statewide except in declared disasters. Eviction actions are filed in the Marion County Circuit Court in Salem.

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📊 Marion County Quick Stats

County Seat Salem (Oregon’s state capital)
Population ~346,000
Largest City Salem (~182,600)
Median Rent ~$1,400–$1,900 (Salem); lower in Woodburn/Stayton
#1 Employer Sector State government
Rent Control State stabilization only (ORS 90.323)
Landlord Rating 7/10 — Stable capital city 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 Marion County Circuit Court (Salem)
Avg Timeline 4–8 weeks (uncontested)

Marion County Local Ordinances

County and city-specific rules that apply alongside Oregon state law — no local rent control in any Marion County city

Category Details
Rental Registration No rental registration or landlord licensing requirement in Marion County, Salem, Keizer, Woodburn, or any other county city as of 2026. ORS Chapter 90 disclosure requirements apply throughout — 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: State Law Only Oregon law (ORS 91.225) prohibits cities and counties from enacting local rent control ordinances, with limited exceptions for declared disasters. No Marion County city has enacted local rent control. Oregon’s statewide stabilization under ORS 90.323 applies throughout the county — annual increases capped at 7% + CPI, maximum 10%, 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 Salem’s rent levels, the stabilization cap is a meaningful constraint on renewal pricing and must be factored into lease management planning.
Just-Cause Eviction Oregon’s statewide just-cause protections under ORS 90.427 apply throughout Marion County. After one year of month-to-month tenancy, landlords must provide a qualifying reason to terminate and pay one month’s relocation assistance. No additional local just-cause requirements apply in any Marion County city.
Salem: State Capital Stability Salem’s identity as the Oregon state capital defines its employment base and, by extension, its rental market. State government is the dominant employer — encompassing agencies from the Oregon Department of Transportation and Department of Human Services to the Oregon State Police, Oregon Department of Education, the Oregon Legislature, and dozens of other agencies that collectively employ tens of thousands of workers in the Salem metro area. State workers earn predictable salaries, receive comprehensive benefits, and tend to maintain multi-year tenancies in communities where they have established lives. For Salem landlords, state government workers represent the market’s most reliable core tenant profile.
Healthcare: Salem Health Salem Health (Salem Hospital) is Marion County’s largest private employer and a major anchor of the local economy. Salem Health employs thousands of nurses, physicians, technicians, therapists, and support staff across its Salem hospital campus and affiliated clinics throughout the county. Healthcare workers are among the most mobile professional populations — willing to relocate for specific positions — and among the most financially stable tenant profiles. Near-hospital neighborhoods consistently outperform the broader Salem market in occupancy rates and rent levels.
Woodburn: Agricultural Hub Woodburn, with approximately 28,000 residents and a population that is approximately 60% Hispanic, is one of the most culturally distinctive cities in the Willamette Valley. The city is a center for the northern valley’s agricultural labor economy — nursery stock, berries, hops, grass seed, and the general fieldwork that supports one of Oregon’s most productive agricultural regions. Woodburn’s rental market reflects its agricultural economy: median incomes and rents are below Salem levels, the Hispanic community is multigenerational and deeply rooted locally, and the tenant pool includes a mix of year-round agricultural workers, food processing employees, retail and service workers, and commuters to Salem. Landlords in Woodburn should provide all notices and disclosures in both English and Spanish as standard practice.
Keizer Keizer, immediately north of Salem, is an incorporated city of approximately 40,000 that functions as a Salem suburb with its own municipal government. Keizer’s rental market tracks Salem closely in rent levels and tenant profiles, with a slightly more suburban, family-oriented character. State government employees and Salem Health workers are common Keizer tenant profiles. No local ordinances apply beyond state law.
Security Deposits & Rental Assistance No statutory deposit cap in Oregon. Return within 31 days with written itemized accounting (ORS 90.300). Double damages plus attorney fees for wrongful withholding. Rental assistance notice required with every 72-hour nonpayment notice (ORS 90.395). Mid-Willamette Valley Community Action Agency (MWVCAA) and Oregon 211 are the primary local rental assistance resources. Include current MWVCAA contact information with every nonpayment notice.

Last verified: April 2026 · Source: ORS Chapter 90 · ORS 91.225 (no local rent control)

🏛️ Courthouse Information

Where landlords file eviction actions in Marion County

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Oregon

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Marion 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 Marion 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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AI-generated, state-specific eviction notices, pay-or-quit letters, lease termination documents, and more — pre-filled with your tenant's information and built to Oregon requirements.

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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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🏙️ Cities in Marion County

Major communities within this county

📍 Marion County at a Glance

Oregon’s state capital county — government-anchored stability, Salem Health as private sector anchor, Chemeketa Community College and Willamette University, Woodburn’s large Hispanic agricultural community (~60%), Santiam Canyon communities rebuilding from 2020 fires (Detroit, Gates, Idanha). No local rent control statewide (ORS 91.225). MWVCAA as primary rental assistance resource.

Marion County

Screen Before You Sign

Verify income at 3x rent. Oregon state agency employees (OHA, ODOT, ODE, DHS, and hundreds of others), Salem Health workers, Chemeketa Community College and Willamette University faculty and staff, and Keizer/Salem area private sector professionals are the most stable profiles. For Woodburn agricultural applicants, review annual income documentation bilingually. Include MWVCAA rental assistance contact with every nonpayment notice.

Run a Tenant Background Check →

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

Marion County is the political center of Oregon — the county that contains the state capital, the State Legislature, the Governor’s office, and the headquarters of virtually every state agency that governs life in Oregon. This institutional identity has profound implications for the rental market. Government employment does not cycle with the broader economy the way private industry does. State workers do not lose their jobs in recessions at the rate private sector workers do. The salary and benefits of state employment are predictable, documented, and verified through a single employer’s HR system. For a Salem landlord, the depth of the government employment pool represents the single most compelling structural advantage of the market — a multi-employer ecosystem of tens of thousands of stable tenants who are simply not available in cities without a state capital.

Salem: Oregon’s Government City

Salem is Oregon’s third largest city at approximately 182,600 residents, and its character as a government city distinguishes it from Eugene to the south and Portland to the north. Where Eugene is a university city and Portland is a commercial and tech hub, Salem is fundamentally an administrative city — a place where the machinery of Oregon state government operates, where legislators and lobbyists commute, and where state workers have built lives and families for generations. The Oregon State Capitol building, its surrounding mall of agency buildings, and the Marion County courthouse form the literal and figurative center of the city.

Salem Health (Salem Hospital) is the county’s largest private employer and the institutional counterpart to state government as a rental market anchor. The hospital system employs thousands of healthcare workers across multiple campuses and is a perpetual source of new-to-Salem tenants — nurses, physicians, therapists, and technicians recruited from across Oregon and beyond who need quality housing quickly upon accepting positions in Salem. The combination of state government and healthcare employment creates a rental market with two deep, stable, and largely non-overlapping professional tenant pools that together provide consistent demand across all unit types and price points.

Chemeketa Community College and Willamette University

Marion County’s higher education sector adds meaningful rental demand. Chemeketa Community College, one of Oregon’s largest community colleges, serves tens of thousands of students annually from campuses in Salem and across the mid-Willamette Valley. Willamette University, a private liberal arts university with approximately 2,000 undergraduate students, occupies a historic campus adjacent to the State Capitol. Both institutions generate student tenant demand for off-campus housing and faculty/staff demand for professional housing, adding educational sector stability to Salem’s already government-heavy employment base.

Woodburn: The Agricultural Hub of the Northern Valley

Twenty miles north of Salem on Interstate 5, Woodburn presents a rental market with a fundamentally different character. Approximately 28,000 residents, approximately 60% Hispanic, and an economy built around the nursery, berry, hop, and general agricultural production that dominates this corner of the Willamette Valley. Woodburn is the commercial and cultural center of Oregon’s northern valley Hispanic community, home to the state’s largest Mexican-American cultural festival, a thriving Spanish-language retail corridor, and a community with multigenerational roots in the agricultural economy that has sustained the region for over a century.

The rental market in Woodburn operates at lower rent levels than Salem — reflecting the income levels of the predominantly agricultural and service workforce — with a tenant pool that includes year-round agricultural workers, food processing employees at nearby plants, retail and service workers, and a growing cohort of first-generation homeowners who have converted portions of the rental stock into owner-occupied inventory. Landlords operating in Woodburn should provide all lease documents, notices, and communications bilingually in English and Spanish. This is not merely courtesy — it is essential professional practice in a community where a large share of the tenant population is more comfortable in Spanish, and where legal notices that are effectively inaccessible to their recipients create compliance risks for landlords.

Santiam Canyon in Marion County

Marion County extends east into the Cascades along the North Santiam River corridor, encompassing the communities of Detroit, Gates, and Idanha — all of which were affected by the catastrophic 2020 Labor Day wildfires (the Beachie Creek and Lionshead fires). These communities, which are shared between Marion and Linn counties, are still in the process of rebuilding. Landlords with properties in the fire-affected Marion County canyon area should be aware of WUI wildfire hazard disclosure requirements and should verify that any post-fire rebuild unit has received all required inspections and certificates of occupancy.

Oregon Law in the State Capital

ORS Chapter 90 applies uniformly throughout Marion County, and Oregon’s prohibition on local rent control (ORS 91.225) means that no city or county in Oregon — including Salem — can enact additional rent control ordinances beyond what state law provides. The statewide stabilization cap (7% + CPI, maximum 10% annually) and the 90-day notice requirement for increases under 10% apply at Salem rent levels and must be built into renewal planning well in advance. Mid-Willamette Valley Community Action Agency (MWVCAA) is the primary local rental assistance resource and should be included with current contact information on every 72-hour nonpayment notice. All eviction actions are filed in the Marion County Circuit Court in Salem.

Marion 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). No local rent control statewide (ORS 91.225); no Marion County city has enacted local rent control. Woodburn: bilingual English/Spanish notices recommended. 2020 wildfire WUI disclosure required for Detroit/Gates/Idanha area properties. Evictions filed in Marion County Circuit Court, Salem. 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 Marion 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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