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Mortgages in Oregon

Mortgage rates and affordability in Oregon

Median home price is $454,200. FHFA says prices are up 0.6% year over year. Start with context, then compare the actual all-in cost.

Ralo is not yet licensed in Oregon. You can still explore live rates and local market context now, and full Ralo support is coming soon.

Explore Oregon rates
$454,200
Median Home Price · Oregon
$1,450
Median Rent
$80,426
Median Income
+0.6%
12-mo HPI
Census ACS 2023 & FHFA 2026 Q1
Market Pulse
Median home price
$454,200
Census ACS 2023
Median monthly rent
$1,450
Census ACS 2023
Median household income
$80,426
Census ACS 2023
12-month price change
+0.6%
FHFA HPI · 2026 Q1
Property tax benchmark
0.77%
Tax Foundation · 2022
Closing cost benchmark
$3,207
Bankrate · 2025
Key Takeaways

At a Glance

  • Median home price in Oregon is $454,200.
  • Median rent runs about $1,450 per month, with median household income around $80,426.
  • FHFA shows home prices up 0.6% year over year in Oregon.
  • Statewide averages help with context, but affordability can still vary meaningfully across metros and counties.
Freshness
Current

Latest market period: 2026 Q1

Dataset synced:

Market trends reflect the latest published FHFA quarter; Census affordability metrics refresh on a slower release cycle.

Mortgage basics, no jargon

If you're tired or skimming, here's what actually matters before you compare rates in Oregon.

Points

Points are upfront fees that lower your rate. They only make sense if you keep the loan long enough to earn the savings back.

Closing costs

Closing costs are the fees to finish the loan (appraisal, title, escrow, taxes, insurance). They're separate from your down payment and can add a meaningful amount to your cash to close.

DTI

DTI is your debt-to-income ratio. Lenders compare your monthly debt payments to your gross monthly income. Lower DTI usually means more options and better pricing.

Illiquid investment

A home is a big, illiquid investment. It can take time and money to sell, so buying makes the most sense if you plan to stay for a while.

Pricing is opaque on purpose.

Low rates can hide high fees. We show every line item so you can make a real apples-to-apples comparison. Ralo focuses on clear, all-in quotes so you can compare mortgage options more clearly.

How Oregon changes the payment

A rate quote only tells part of the story. In Oregon, taxes, insurance, housing costs, and median home values can move the real monthly payment by hundreds of dollars. That is why we compare the full monthly payment and principal-and-interest math, not just the rate you see in an ad. Start with current rate comparisons and then pressure-test the full monthly payment.

  • Median home price: $454,200
  • Median rent: $1,450 per month
  • Median household income: $80,426
  • FHFA HPI: 628.20 in 2026 Q1
  • Statewide effective property tax benchmark: 0.77% (2022)
  • Statewide average closing cost benchmark: $3,207(2025)

How buyers should compare offers

Start with statewide affordability context, then compare the exact property scenario you care about. Your quoted rate matters less if the total payment changes because of escrow setup, insurance, or the home price you actually target. Our first-time buyer guide is a useful checklist before you compare mortgage options.

  • Compare rate, APR, discount points, and fees together.
  • Model the payment on the same purchase price and down payment.
  • Verify taxes, insurance, and HOA dues on the exact address.
  • Use statewide averages for context, not as a substitute for a quote.
Savings Math

See the dollar impact of a lower rate

Monthly payment delta

$132

Principal and interest only on a 30-year fixed loan.

30-year total savings

$47,348

Lower rates only help if fees and break-even timing still make sense.

Mortgage options in Oregon

Citations

Primary sources behind this page

  1. Consumer Financial Protection BureauAccessed for source verification
  2. Federal Housing Finance AgencyAccessed for source verification
  3. U.S. Census BureauAccessed for source verification
  4. Freddie MacAccessed for source verification
  5. Tax FoundationAccessed for source verification
  6. BankrateAccessed for source verification

Common Oregon mortgage questions

Reviewed By
Arjun Lalwani headshot

Arjun Lalwani

CEO & Co-Founder

NMLS #2753950

Former Google product leader with expertise in marketplace systems. Recognized by the U.S. government for extraordinary ability in building and scaling marketplaces. Licensed mortgage professional bringing rigorous product execution to home financing.

Want a clear quote for Oregon?

Ralo is coming soon in Oregon. You can still use our live rates and market context now while broader service availability expands.

Explore Oregon rates