#1 Landlord Community

⚖️ Eviction Laws
🔄 Compare Evictions
📚 State Laws
🔎 Search Laws
🏛️ Courthouse Finder
⏱️ Timeline Tool
📖 Glossary
📊 Scorecard
💰 Security Deposits
🏠 Back to Legal Resources Hub
🏠 Law-Buddy
🏠 Compare State Laws
🏠 Quick Eviction Data
🔎 Notice Calculator
🔎 Cost Estimator
🔎 Timeline Calculator
🔎 Eviction Readiness
💰 Full Landlord Tenant Laws

Lane County Oregon
Lane County · Oregon

Lane County Landlord-Tenant Law

Oregon landlord guide — Eugene, Springfield, Eugene Rental Housing Code & ORS Chapter 90

🏛️ County Seat: Eugene
👥 Population: ~383,000
⚖️ State: OR

Landlord-Tenant Law in Lane County, Oregon

Lane County is Oregon’s fourth most populous county, home to approximately 383,000 residents across a geographic area that stretches from the Cascade crest to the Pacific coast. Its urban core — Eugene, Oregon’s second largest city, and neighboring Springfield — contains the majority of the population and virtually all of the county’s multi-family rental inventory. The University of Oregon, with approximately 22,000 students, is the defining economic and demographic force in the Eugene market, creating one of the most robust and consistent sources of rental demand in the state. PeaceHealth Medical Group, the University of Oregon, and the Eugene 4J School District are the county’s largest employers, anchoring a service and knowledge economy that has gradually diversified from its timber-dependent roots.

The landlord-tenant legal landscape in Lane County is among the most complex in Oregon. ORS Chapter 90 applies throughout the county, but the City of Eugene has enacted a multi-phase Rental Housing Code (Eugene City Code 8.425) that adds substantial local requirements layered on top of state law. Eugene landlords must comply with both frameworks simultaneously. Springfield and all other Lane County communities outside Eugene operate under state law only. Eviction actions are filed in the Lane County Circuit Court in Eugene.

Baker County Benton County Clackamas County Clatsop County Columbia County
Coos County Crook County Curry County Deschutes County Douglas County
Gilliam County Grant County Harney County Hood River County Jackson County
Jefferson County Josephine County Klamath County Lake County Lane County
Lincoln County Linn County Malheur County Marion County Morrow County
Multnomah County Polk County Sherman County Tillamook County Umatilla County
Union County Wallowa County Wasco County Washington County Wheeler County
Yamhill County

📊 Lane County Quick Stats

County Seat Eugene
Population ~383,000
Largest City Eugene (~179,000)
Median Rent ~$1,400–$1,900 (Eugene/Springfield)
Rent Control State stabilization (ORS 90.323) + Eugene local code
Eugene Screening Fee Cap $10 maximum (upheld by Oregon Supreme Court 2025)
Landlord Rating 6/10 — Strong demand, active local regulation

⚖️ 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)
No-Fault (Eugene, covered) 2 months’ relocation assistance required
Eugene Security Deposit Cap 2x monthly rent (local ordinance)
Court Lane County Circuit Court
Avg Timeline 5–9 weeks (uncontested)

Lane County & Eugene Local Ordinances

Eugene has enacted a multi-phase Rental Housing Code that applies in addition to Oregon state law. Springfield and other county cities operate under state law only.

Category Details
Eugene Rental Housing Code: Phase I (2022) Eugene Ordinance 20670 (effective August 2022) established Phase I of the city’s Rental Housing Code (Eugene City Code 8.425). Key Phase I requirements: (1) Screening fee cap of $10 — the maximum applicant screening charge in Eugene is $10, regardless of the statewide ORS 90.295 amount. This cap was challenged in court; the Oregon Supreme Court denied the plaintiffs’ appeal in February 2025, confirming the $10 cap is valid and enforceable. (2) Photo documentation required — landlords must provide photo documentation of unit condition at move-in and must provide comparable documentation at move-out. (3) Tenant references required — within five business days of a written request, landlords must provide the tenant with a reference using a city-approved form. (4) Tenant educational information — at lease signing, landlords must provide tenants with a city-approved document describing their rights and obligations and the requirements of the Rental Housing Code. (5) Eviction reporting — landlords must report to the city any termination notice that results in a termination of tenancy.
Eugene Rental Housing Code: Phase II (2023) Eugene Ordinance 20694 (effective August 25, 2023, administrative rules updated April 17, 2024) added Phase II requirements. Key Phase II requirements: (1) Security deposit cap of 2x monthly rent — unlike the statewide framework which has no cap, Eugene landlords may not collect a security deposit exceeding two months’ rent for the unit (pet deposits and certain other modifications may be added separately within limits). (2) Two months’ relocation assistance for no-fault terminations — when a Eugene landlord terminates a covered tenancy without cause, or terminates to sell the property, renovate, or have a family member move in, the landlord must pay the tenant two months’ rent in relocation assistance. Owner-occupants living on the property may qualify for an exemption. (3) Application processing in order received — landlords must process rental applications in the order received and may not skip or reorder applicants. (4) Eviction reporting expanded — penalties for failure to report evictions to the city were strengthened. Eugene City Council reviewed Phase I and II implementation in February 2026 and is evaluating Phase III and a Tenant Opportunity to Purchase (TOPA) policy.
Statewide Rent Stabilization (ORS 90.323) Oregon’s statewide rent stabilization applies throughout Lane 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. Eugene’s local Rental Housing Code does not add a separate rent cap beyond the statewide framework, but Eugene landlords must comply with all Phase I and II provisions at every renewal.
Just-Cause Eviction (ORS 90.427) Oregon’s statewide just-cause protections apply throughout Lane County. After one year of month-to-month tenancy, landlords must provide a qualifying reason to terminate and pay one month’s relocation assistance (state law). Eugene’s Phase II ordinance expands this to require two months’ relocation assistance for no-fault terminations in Eugene, which is more protective than state law and governs in the city. Outside Eugene, state law’s one-month relocation assistance applies for qualifying no-fault terminations.
Springfield & Other Lane County Cities Springfield, Florence, Cottage Grove, Junction City, Veneta, Oakridge, and all other incorporated communities in Lane County outside Eugene are governed solely by ORS Chapter 90 and state law. No local rental ordinances apply in these cities as of 2026. The statewide rent stabilization cap, just-cause eviction framework, and one-month relocation assistance requirement for qualifying no-fault terminations apply.
University of Oregon Student Market The University of Oregon’s ~22,000 students create a concentrated, cycle-driven rental demand that fills a significant portion of Eugene’s near-campus housing stock. Student tenants require standard ORS Chapter 90 lease structures. Eugene’s local ordinance requirements — particularly the $10 screening fee cap, application-in-order-received requirement, and documentation obligations — apply to student tenants and all other Eugene tenants equally. Guarantor co-signers are legally permissible and common for student tenants. Near-campus properties command significant premiums and experience very low vacancy during the academic year; turnover risk concentrates in summer months.
Rental Assistance Notice Required with every 72-hour nonpayment notice (ORS 90.395). CAHOOTS, ShelterCare, Square One Villages, the Looking Glass Community Services, and Oregon 211 are among the key local resources. Eugene has significant homelessness prevention infrastructure relative to its size, including a dedicated Rental Housing Navigator position established by the Phase I ordinance.

Last verified: April 2026 · Eugene Renter Protections · ORS Chapter 90

🏛️ Courthouse Information

Where landlords file eviction actions in Lane County

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Oregon

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Lane 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 Lane County (Eugene landlords must also comply with Eugene Rental Housing Code)

⚡ 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.
🐛 See an error on this page? Let us know
Underground Landlord Underground Landlord
🔍 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.
Ready to File?

Generate Oregon-Compliant Legal Documents

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.

Generate a Document → View AI Hub →

⏱ 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.
Underground LandlordUnderground Landlord

🏙️ Cities in Lane County

Major communities within this county

📍 Lane County at a Glance

University of Oregon drives Eugene’s rental market. Eugene Rental Housing Code adds significant local obligations: $10 screening cap, 2x deposit cap, 2 months’ relocation for no-fault evictions, photo documentation, tenant references, and eviction reporting. Springfield and other county cities: state law only. Phase III (TOPA) being evaluated as of 2026.

Lane County

Screen Before You Sign

Verify income at 3x rent. PeaceHealth employees, UO faculty and staff, Eugene 4J and Springfield School District staff, Lane County government, and registered healthcare workers are the most stable profiles. Student applicants: require guarantor co-signers. Eugene landlords: process applications in order received, charge no more than $10 screening fee, provide all required documentation at lease signing. Consult a Lane County attorney before any no-fault termination — relocation assistance obligations are significant.

Run a Tenant Background Check →

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

Lane County is Oregon’s second city and its most regulation-layered rental market outside Portland. Eugene’s City Council has been the most active legislative body on tenant rights in Oregon outside of the Portland metro, having enacted a multi-phase Rental Housing Code that now governs nearly every significant landlord action in the city — from the $10 ceiling on applicant screening fees to a two-month relocation assistance obligation for no-fault evictions to the requirement that applications be processed strictly in the order they are received. For landlords, Lane County is simultaneously one of Oregon’s most compelling investment markets, driven by the University of Oregon’s consistent demand engine, and one of its most demanding compliance environments. Understanding both is essential before acquiring or operating in this county.

Eugene: The University Market

Eugene is Oregon’s second largest city, home to approximately 179,000 residents and the flagship University of Oregon, which enrolls approximately 22,000 students annually. The university is the defining force of Eugene’s rental market in a way that no other institution shapes any other Oregon city of comparable size. Near-campus neighborhoods — the University District, Whiteaker, South Eugene, and the area west of campus — experience vacancy rates that approach zero during the academic year, with turnover concentrated in June and the replacement cycle driven by the predictable rhythm of academic enrollment. This structural demand is an enormous asset for near-campus landlords; vacancy periods that plague other markets are brief or nonexistent for well-maintained properties within walking distance of campus.

Student tenants require the same ORS Chapter 90 lease framework as all Oregon tenants, plus full compliance with Eugene’s Rental Housing Code. Co-signer agreements with parents or guardians are legally appropriate and practically essential for student tenants whose independent income does not meet the 3x rent threshold. Eugene’s $10 screening fee cap — upheld by the Oregon Supreme Court in February 2025 after a legal challenge that reached the state’s highest court — means that landlords cannot use screening fees as a revenue source or as a barrier to applications. The application-in-order-received requirement means landlords must work through applications as submitted, without the ability to skip or prioritize based on factors not immediately apparent from the application order.

Eugene’s Rental Housing Code: What Landlords Must Know

Eugene’s two-phase Rental Housing Code, enacted between 2022 and 2023, creates a compliance framework that is more demanding than any other Oregon city except Portland. Phase I requirements (effective August 2022) include the $10 screening fee cap, mandatory photo documentation of unit condition at move-in and move-out, tenant reference requirements (within five business days of a written request), tenant educational materials at lease signing, and eviction reporting to the city. Phase II requirements (effective August 2023, administrative rules updated April 2024) added a security deposit cap of two months’ rent, a two-month relocation assistance obligation for no-fault terminations, and the application-in-order-received requirement.

The security deposit cap deserves particular attention. Oregon state law has no cap on security deposits; Eugene’s local cap of two months’ rent is a meaningful constraint for landlords who previously relied on larger deposits as risk mitigation tools. The practical implication is that tenant screening quality — income verification, rental history, and background checks — becomes even more important when the deposit buffer is capped. A thorough upfront screening process is the primary risk management tool available to Eugene landlords within the ordinance’s constraints.

The two-month relocation assistance obligation for no-fault evictions is the Phase II provision with the most significant financial impact. When a Eugene landlord terminates a covered tenancy without cause, or terminates to sell the property, substantially renovate, or have a family member move in, the landlord must pay the departing tenant two months’ rent. At Eugene’s rent levels, this obligation can run $3,000–$4,000 or more per unit. Owner-occupants living on the property may qualify for an exemption, but the exemption criteria are specific and must be verified. Eugene City Council is actively evaluating a Phase III expansion and a Tenant Opportunity to Purchase (TOPA) policy — landlords should monitor developments closely.

Springfield: The Affordable Alternative

Springfield, Eugene’s neighbor across the Willamette River, is a distinct city with its own character and a rental market that operates under state law only — no local ordinances apply. Springfield has historically offered somewhat lower rents than Eugene for comparable units, attracting working-class families, healthcare workers at PeaceHealth RiverBend, manufacturing workers, and tenants who want Willamette Valley access at below-Eugene price points. The absence of Eugene’s local ordinance requirements makes Springfield a somewhat more operationally straightforward market for landlords, though state law obligations apply fully.

Florence, the Oregon Coast, and Rural Lane County

Lane County’s 45 miles of Pacific coastline include Florence, a retirement-oriented coastal city with a median age near 58, and the surrounding Oregon Dunes recreation area. Florence’s rental market is thin but stable, serving permanent residents in a community that has significant seasonal tourism pressure. The Oakridge area in the Cascade foothills serves a small population of timber industry workers, outdoor recreation enthusiasts, and remote workers who have discovered the community’s relative affordability and forest access.

Lane County landlord-tenant matters are governed by ORS Chapter 90, Oregon’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, plus the Eugene Rental Housing Code (Eugene City Code 8.425) for properties within Eugene city limits. Eugene Ordinance 20670 (Phase I, effective August 2022): $10 screening fee cap (upheld Oregon Supreme Court February 2025), photo documentation, tenant references, educational materials, eviction reporting. Eugene Ordinance 20694 (Phase II, effective August 2023): security deposit cap 2x monthly rent, 2 months’ relocation assistance for no-fault terminations, application-in-order-received. Phase III/TOPA under evaluation as of 2026. Statewide: 72-hr nonpayment notice (ORS 90.394); 30-day lease violation cure (ORS 90.392); rent stabilization 7%+CPI, max 10% (ORS 90.323); just-cause after 1 year (ORS 90.427); 1 month relocation outside Eugene (state law). Evictions filed in Lane County Circuit Court, Eugene. No local rent control in Springfield or other county cities. Consult a licensed Oregon attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

More Oregon Counties

← View All Oregon Landlord-Tenant Law

Disclaimer: This page provides general information about landlord-tenant law in Lane County, Oregon and is not legal advice. The Eugene Rental Housing Code is actively evolving — always verify current ordinance requirements with a licensed Oregon attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

Explore by State

ALAKAZARCACOCTDEDCFLGAHIIDILINIAKSKYLAMEMDMAMIMNMSMOMTNENVNHNJNMNYNCNDOHOKORPARISCSDTNTXUTVTVAWAWVWIWY

Click any state to explore resources

Browse by State

AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT DC DE FL GA HI
ID IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MD MA MI MN
MS MO MT NE NV NH NJ NM NY NC ND OH
OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT VA WA
WV WI WY