Oregon Property Tax
OR
Effective property tax rate
0.85%
0.15pp below the national average of 1.00%
Calculate Property Tax in Oregon
Estimate your annual property tax bill. Pick a Oregon county and enter your home value.
Property Tax Calculator
County Rankings
Highest and lowest effective property tax rates among Oregon's counties.
Highest rates
| # | County | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gilliam County | 1.01% |
| 2 | Umatilla County | 0.99% |
| 3 | Benton County | 0.98% |
| 4 | Harney County | 0.97% |
| 5 | Multnomah County | 0.96% |
| 6 | Linn County | 0.91% |
| 7 | Union County | 0.89% |
| 8 | Baker County | 0.88% |
| 9 | Marion County | 0.88% |
| 10 | Clackamas County | 0.87% |
Lowest rates
| # | County | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Josephine County | 0.53% |
| 2 | Curry County | 0.53% |
| 3 | Wallowa County | 0.58% |
| 4 | Hood River County | 0.59% |
| 5 | Tillamook County | 0.60% |
| 6 | Deschutes County | 0.62% |
| 7 | Crook County | 0.64% |
| 8 | Lake County | 0.64% |
| 9 | Douglas County | 0.66% |
| 10 | Klamath County | 0.68% |
All Counties
Browse property tax data for all 36 counties in Oregon.
Showing 36 of 36 counties
- Baker CountyRate:0.88%Home:$247,700Tax:$2,184
- Benton CountyRate:0.98%Home:$481,700Tax:$4,713
- Clackamas CountyRate:0.87%Home:$577,900Tax:$5,051
- Clatsop CountyRate:0.70%Home:$437,800Tax:$3,084
- Columbia CountyRate:0.76%Home:$390,600Tax:$2,948
- Coos CountyRate:0.74%Home:$302,800Tax:$2,243
- Crook CountyRate:0.64%Home:$423,300Tax:$2,703
- Curry CountyRate:0.53%Home:$366,700Tax:$1,948
- Deschutes CountyRate:0.62%Home:$596,000Tax:$3,670
- Douglas CountyRate:0.66%Home:$283,200Tax:$1,869
- Gilliam CountyRate:1.01%Home:$158,400Tax:$1,597
- Grant CountyRate:0.76%Home:$225,100Tax:$1,713
- Harney CountyRate:0.97%Home:$190,600Tax:$1,845
- Hood River CountyRate:0.59%Home:$571,200Tax:$3,359
- Jackson CountyRate:0.76%Home:$400,200Tax:$3,032
- Jefferson CountyRate:0.74%Home:$339,200Tax:$2,506
- Josephine CountyRate:0.53%Home:$383,100Tax:$2,023
- Klamath CountyRate:0.68%Home:$255,700Tax:$1,734
- Lake CountyRate:0.64%Home:$219,400Tax:$1,407
- Lane CountyRate:0.86%Home:$395,800Tax:$3,417
- Lincoln CountyRate:0.84%Home:$387,700Tax:$3,241
- Linn CountyRate:0.91%Home:$344,600Tax:$3,130
- Malheur CountyRate:0.81%Home:$221,300Tax:$1,799
- Marion CountyRate:0.88%Home:$383,300Tax:$3,382
- Morrow CountyRate:0.82%Home:$229,800Tax:$1,885
- Multnomah CountyRate:0.96%Home:$528,000Tax:$5,061
- Polk CountyRate:0.84%Home:$419,500Tax:$3,534
- Sherman CountyRate:0.69%Home:$206,700Tax:$1,436
- Tillamook CountyRate:0.60%Home:$408,600Tax:$2,449
- Umatilla CountyRate:0.99%Home:$256,100Tax:$2,534
- Union CountyRate:0.89%Home:$260,500Tax:$2,307
- Wallowa CountyRate:0.58%Home:$371,900Tax:$2,173
- Wasco CountyRate:0.84%Home:$332,500Tax:$2,784
- Washington CountyRate:0.87%Home:$558,500Tax:$4,852
- Wheeler CountyRate:0.73%Home:$259,000Tax:$1,884
- Yamhill CountyRate:0.75%Home:$442,700Tax:$3,318
Oregon Property Tax FAQ
Common questions about property taxes in Oregon, answered with current data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Property tax in Oregon is calculated by multiplying your home's assessed value by the local effective tax rate. The state-wide effective rate is 0.85%, but rates vary significantly by county. Each county applies its own assessment ratio and mill rate, so the actual rate you pay depends on where you live within Oregon.
The population-weighted effective property tax rate in Oregon is 0.85%. Based on the median home value of $369,300, a typical homeowner pays around $2,520 per year in property tax. This figure is calculated from U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023 data across all 36 counties in Oregon.
Josephine County has the lowest effective property tax rate in Oregon at 0.53%. The median home value there is $383,100, with a median annual tax of $2,023.
Gilliam County has the highest effective property tax rate in Oregon at 1.01%. The median home value there is $158,400, with a median annual tax of $1,597.
The U.S. national population-weighted average effective property tax rate is 1.00%. Oregon's rate of 0.85% is 0.15 percentage points below the national average. This means Oregon homeowners typically pay less in property tax than the average American homeowner, relative to home value.