A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Washington County, Oregon
Washington County is Oregon’s rental investment market in its most compelling suburban form: a county of 600,000 people with the highest household income in the state, a technology employment base that generates consistently high tenant income, low vacancy rates driven by housing supply constraints, and a geographic position within the Portland metropolitan area that gives it access to one of the Pacific Northwest’s most economically productive regional labor markets. The Silicon Forest — Oregon’s name for the technology and semiconductor industry cluster that has developed in Washington County over the past four decades — has created a tenant population profile that few suburban rental markets anywhere in the country can match for income stability and depth.
The Silicon Forest: Intel, Nike, and Oregon’s Tech Economy
The defining fact of Washington County’s rental market is Intel Corporation. Oregon’s largest private-sector employer, Intel has operated semiconductor fabrication and design facilities in Hillsboro since the 1970s, and today employs tens of thousands of engineers, process technicians, project managers, and support professionals across its Ronler Acres, Aloha, and Jones Farm campus complexes. The Intel workforce generates a rental demand pool that is remarkable not just for its size but for its income and employment stability characteristics — semiconductor engineers have specialized skills that make them highly employable, and Intel’s decades-long Oregon presence provides institutional continuity that supports long multi-year tenancies.
Nike’s world headquarters campus in Beaverton adds another major employer of high-income professionals to the county’s tenant pool. Nike employs designers, marketing executives, finance professionals, supply chain managers, and technology staff at its Beaverton campus — a workforce whose household incomes comfortably support Washington County’s $1,610 fair market rent levels and whose employment stability at a Fortune 500 company anchors multi-year lease commitments. The Silicon Forest extends beyond Intel and Nike to include Genentech, Qorvo, Tektronix, and dozens of smaller technology and advanced manufacturing employers that collectively make Washington County one of the five or six most economically concentrated suburban technology hubs in the country.
Hillsboro: Intel Town with a Downtown
Hillsboro has grown from a modest Tualatin Valley agricultural center into Oregon’s fifth-largest city, with approximately 112,000 residents and a development pipeline concentrated in the downtown core and in the residential areas surrounding Intel’s campuses. The city has invested significantly in its downtown through urban renewal, attracting restaurants, retail, and mixed-use development to a city center that was previously underdeveloped relative to its population. The Hillsboro segment of the MAX Blue Line light rail provides transit connectivity to Portland, giving tenants who work downtown a car-free commute option that adds value to properties within walking distance of MAX stations.
A distinctive feature of Hillsboro’s rental market is the significant population of Intel employees on H-1B visas and other work authorization categories who have relocated from India, China, Taiwan, and other countries to work at Intel’s Oregon operations. These tenants often arrive with strong income and employment profiles but limited U.S. credit history, creating a screening challenge for landlords who rely primarily on FICO scores. Best practice: supplement credit scoring with direct employer verification from Intel’s HR department, verification of the employment authorization validity period, international credit reports where available, and employment offer letters confirming compensation. These tenants are often excellent long-term renters — screening procedures that don’t accommodate their profile unnecessarily leave money on the table.
Beaverton: Nike, Diversity, and the MAX Corridor
Beaverton (~100,000) has become one of Oregon’s most diverse cities — a transformation driven by the international character of the technology workforce and the communities that have established themselves in Washington County over the past three decades. The city has significant Korean, Indian, Vietnamese, and Chinese-American populations, and is home to a rich array of ethnic restaurants, cultural institutions, and community organizations that have made it a genuinely multicultural community rather than a homogeneous suburb. This diversity is an asset for landlords: a diverse tenant pool provides access to a broader range of income and employment profiles than a more homogeneous market, and the community stability that established ethnic communities provide supports long-term tenancy patterns.
Beaverton’s MAX Light Rail stations along the Blue and Red lines create walkable, transit-oriented neighborhoods where rental demand is particularly strong. Properties within half a mile of MAX stations in Beaverton command a rent premium and experience lower vacancy than comparable properties further from transit. Nike employees who commute by MAX add to the already robust demand in station-area corridors.
South County: Tigard, Tualatin, and Sherwood
The I-5 and Highway 99W corridors running south through Tigard and Tualatin carry much of Washington County’s residential development pressure. Tigard’s Triangle area — a mixed-use district adjacent to the Washington Square area — has seen significant multi-family development. Tualatin’s Bridgeport Village and its surrounding residential neighborhoods attract families and dual-income households who value the suburban lifestyle and access to both Portland and Washington County employment via I-5. Sherwood, at the county’s southern edge, has grown rapidly as a family-oriented community with new residential development and a school district reputation that draws homebuyers and renters with children. Rental demand in these south county communities is strong, driven by the same Silicon Forest economy but with a more family-oriented residential character than the technology-worker-heavy Hillsboro and Beaverton markets.
Forest Grove, Cornelius, and the West End
Forest Grove and Cornelius occupy a different economic niche from the Silicon Forest cities. Forest Grove is a genuine college town, home to Pacific University’s health sciences programs in optometry, pharmacy, dental, and physical therapy. Graduate and professional students in health sciences programs have longer tenancy periods and more stable (if modest) income than undergraduates, making them a workable tenant segment with guarantor co-signer agreements. Cornelius has a large Hispanic population and a rental market serving the Tualatin Valley agricultural and food processing workforce — a different profile from the technology workers who dominate eastern county markets but a stable and consistent tenant base for landlords who understand the community.
ORS Chapter 90 in Washington County
Oregon’s statewide landlord-tenant law applies uniformly throughout Washington County. The statewide rent stabilization cap (ORS 90.323) is a meaningful operational constraint in a market where rents have risen substantially over the past decade — landlords with long-term tenants at below-market rents need multi-year renewal strategies to approach market rates within the 9.5% annual cap (effective 2026). The just-cause eviction framework after year one, the 90-day notice requirement for no-cause terminations, and the relocation assistance requirement (ORS 90.427) apply to all qualifying tenancies.
Washington County Circuit Court in Hillsboro is a high-volume eviction court by Oregon standards — the county’s population ensures a steady case load, and the court’s staff and judges are experienced with landlord-tenant law. This works in compliant landlords’ favor but also means that procedural defects in notices or service are unlikely to go unnoticed. Every 72-hour nonpayment notice must include Oregon 211 and Community Action Organization contact information (ORS 90.395). Service of the notice must be properly documented. All timelines must be precisely calculated. These are the basics — but in Washington County’s court, basics matter.
Washington 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 (ORS 90.323); 9.5% cap for 2026. Security deposit return: 31 days (ORS 90.300). No local rent control. H-1B/international tenants: alternative verification procedures recommended. All evictions filed in Washington County Circuit Court, Hillsboro. Include CAO Washington County and Oregon 211 with every nonpayment notice. Consult a licensed Oregon attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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