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Lake County Oregon
Lake County · Oregon

Lake County Landlord-Tenant Law

Oregon landlord guide — Lakeview, Oregon Outback high desert & ORS Chapter 90

🏛️ County Seat: Lakeview
👥 Population: ~8,200
⚖️ State: OR

Landlord-Tenant Law in Lake County, Oregon

Lake County is one of the most sparsely populated and geographically remote counties in the American West — a vast basin-and-range landscape in southeastern Oregon known as the Oregon Outback, covering over 8,300 square miles with fewer than 8,200 residents. More than 78% of the county’s land is owned and managed by federal and state agencies, including the Fremont-Winema National Forest and extensive Bureau of Land Management holdings. The county seat, Lakeview, bills itself as the “Tallest Town in Oregon” at an elevation of 4,757 feet and serves as the economic, governmental, and healthcare center for a region that extends well into neighboring counties. With a population of approximately 2,400, Lakeview is home to the county’s hospital, high school, BLM district office, and the Collins Companies sawmill — the last remaining lumber mill in the county.

The residential rental market in Lake County is among the smallest in Oregon, concentrated almost entirely in Lakeview. All landlord-tenant matters are governed by ORS Chapter 90, with eviction actions filed in the Lake County Circuit Court in Lakeview. No local rent control exists anywhere in the county.

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Yamhill County

📊 Lake County Quick Stats

County Seat Lakeview
Population ~8,200
Largest City Lakeview (~2,400)
Median Rent ~$1,074 (Lakeview)
Median Home Value ~$211,000
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 Lake County Circuit Court
Avg Timeline 4–8 weeks (uncontested)

Lake 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 Lake County or Lakeview 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 commencement 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 Lakeview rent levels, the cap is rarely a practical constraint, but the notice requirements still apply fully. In a market this small, any rent increase that is not handled carefully and communicated early can create tenancy instability that is hard to recover from given the thin replacement tenant pool.
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 a county with only ~8,200 residents, a displaced tenant may have no viable local housing alternative — the practical consequences of a no-cause termination fall on the entire community. Document qualifying reasons carefully and maintain thorough records.
Federal Employment Anchor The Bureau of Land Management’s Lakeview District manages several million acres of public land across Lake and Harney counties and maintains a significant district headquarters presence in Lakeview. BLM resource professionals — range conservationists, wildlife biologists, archaeologists, hydrologists, and administrative staff — represent the highest-income and most financially stable employment tier in the county. The Fremont-Winema National Forest’s Lakeview Ranger District adds U.S. Forest Service employees to the professional tenant pool. Federal employees assigned to Lakeview typically accept multi-year assignments, making them reliable long-term tenants who are motivated to maintain stable housing in a remote location.
Warner Creek Correctional Facility The Warner Creek Correctional Facility, a 400-bed minimum security state prison located south of Paisley, employs approximately 110 correctional professionals — corrections officers, healthcare staff, counselors, and administrative workers. These employees represent stable, year-round state government employment and form a meaningful component of the county’s professional rental market. Corrections employees often commute from Lakeview and may seek housing in the county seat rather than in the immediate vicinity of the facility.
Ranching & Agricultural Economy Lake County’s cattle ranching economy supports a rural workforce of ranch hands, agricultural workers, and small business operators whose income levels and housing needs vary significantly. Seasonal ranching income patterns and the cash-dominant nature of some agricultural employment make conventional income verification more complex for this segment of the tenant pool. Landlords screening ranch and agricultural worker applicants should review annual income documentation rather than relying solely on monthly pay stubs.
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 community of 2,400 people, a landlord’s reputation for fair deposit handling is known by virtually every potential future tenant. Meticulous move-in and move-out documentation protects both parties and preserves the landlord’s community standing.
Rental Assistance Notice Required with every 72-hour nonpayment notice (ORS 90.395). Oregon 211 is the primary statewide referral resource; local community support services are limited given the county’s small population and remote location. Include current Oregon 211 contact information with every nonpayment notice.

Last verified: April 2026 · Source: ORS Chapter 90

🏛️ Courthouse Information

Where landlords file eviction actions in Lake County

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Oregon

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Lake 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 Lake 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 Lake County

Incorporated communities within this county

📍 Lake County at a Glance

Oregon Outback at 4,757 ft — “Tallest Town in Oregon,” 78%+ federal land, BLM district headquarters, Warner Creek Correctional Facility, Collins Companies sawmill, and vast cattle ranching country. One of Oregon’s smallest rental markets. Federal employees and corrections staff are the most stable tenant profiles. No local rent control.

Lake County

Screen Before You Sign

Verify income at 3x rent. BLM Lakeview District professionals, Fremont-Winema National Forest staff, Warner Creek Correctional Facility corrections officers and staff, Lake Health District employees, and Lake County government workers are the most reliable profiles. In a community of 2,400 people, every tenant relationship is a community relationship — take references seriously and consult a local Oregon attorney before any legal action.

Run a Tenant Background Check →

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

Lake County is one of Oregon’s most extraordinary places — an 8,300-square-mile expanse of high-desert basin and range, volcanic landscape, alkaline lakes, and sagebrush steppe in the southeastern corner of the state that locals call the Oregon Outback. It is also, by any reasonable measure, one of the most challenging environments in which to operate as a residential landlord. The county has approximately 8,200 residents distributed across an area larger than some eastern states. Its largest city, Lakeview, has fewer than 2,500 people. The nearest city of any significant size — Klamath Falls to the west, Burns to the north, or Alturas, California to the south — is hours away by road. In this context, the rental market is less a market in the conventional sense and more a community resource: a thin, relationship-driven inventory that serves a small population of public land managers, corrections professionals, healthcare workers, ranchers, and the teachers and service workers who support them.

Lakeview: The Tallest Town, the Only Town

Lakeview, at 4,757 feet above sea level, is the highest incorporated community in Oregon — a distinction the town has proudly claimed for generations. It is also the only city of any scale in the county, and virtually the entirety of Lake County’s conventional rental housing inventory is found within or immediately adjacent to its 1.56 square miles. The city hosts the Lake County courthouse, the Lake Health District hospital, the BLM Lakeview District headquarters, the Fremont-Winema National Forest’s Lakeview Ranger District office, the county schools, and the Collins Companies sawmill that represents the last active timber production in a county that once had multiple mills.

Rents in Lakeview are modest by Oregon standards — a median gross rent around $1,074, median home values around $211,000, and a cost of living index well below the national average. These numbers attract investors seeking affordable acquisition costs, and the fundamental demand drivers — stable federal employment, corrections employment, healthcare — are real. The challenge is equally real: a replacement tenant pool measured in hundreds of households rather than thousands, a geographic isolation that makes property management from a distance essentially unworkable, and a community scale where every landlord-tenant interaction is visible to the entire market.

The Federal Employment Foundation

Over 78% of Lake County’s land is owned and managed by federal and state agencies, and the employment that flows from managing those lands is the economic foundation of Lakeview. The Bureau of Land Management’s Lakeview District is one of the largest BLM districts in the Pacific Northwest, managing approximately 2.7 million acres of public land across Lake and portions of Harney counties. The district headquarters in Lakeview employs range conservationists, wildlife biologists, archaeologists, hydrologists, law enforcement rangers, and administrative staff who earn federal wages and benefits in one of the West’s most remote duty stations.

Federal employees assigned to Lakeview accept positions knowing they are committing to a remote, isolated posting that is not for everyone. Those who choose to stay — and many do for years or careers — tend to be deeply engaged with the landscape and community, stable in their employment, and motivated to maintain quality housing in a place where quality housing is not abundant. From a landlord’s perspective, a BLM biologist or Forest Service range manager with a multi-year district assignment is among the most desirable tenant profiles available in the Lake County market.

Warner Creek Correctional Facility

The Warner Creek Correctional Facility, opened in 2005 and located south of Paisley on a 91-acre site, is a 400-bed minimum security state prison that employs approximately 110 correctional professionals. The facility is notable for its use of geothermal heating — a nod to the volcanic character of the Lake County landscape — and represents a significant public-sector employer in a county with very few large employers of any kind. Corrections officers, healthcare staff, counselors, food service professionals, and administrative workers employed at Warner Creek represent stable, year-round Oregon state government employment. Many choose to live in Lakeview rather than in the immediate vicinity of the facility, making them a meaningful component of the Lakeview rental market.

Operating Under ORS Chapter 90 in Lake County

Oregon’s landlord-tenant law applies in full throughout Lake County, and the procedural requirements are not diminished by the county’s remote character. The 72-hour nonpayment notice must include rental assistance contact information (ORS 90.395) — Oregon 211 is the primary statewide resource in a county without significant local rental assistance infrastructure. The just-cause eviction framework after year one of month-to-month tenancy requires documented qualifying reasons — in a housing market where a displaced tenant may have no local alternative, these protections carry real weight. Security deposit accounting must be completed within 31 days of move-out with written itemization (ORS 90.300).

For any landlord considering Lake County as a rental investment destination, the honest message is the same as it is for Harney County, Wheeler County, and the other Oregon outback markets: local presence and local relationships are not optional. A landlord who cannot personally respond to maintenance issues in Lakeview, who does not know local contractors and tradespeople by name, and who cannot personally manage tenant relationships in a community where everyone knows everyone is not positioned to succeed here regardless of how favorable the acquisition economics appear on paper. This is a market for landlords who live in or near the county, not for remote investors.

Lake 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). County population ~8,200; Lakeview ~2,400. 78%+ federal/state-owned land. No local rent control. Evictions filed in Lake County Circuit Court, Lakeview. 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 Lake 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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