How much notice must a landlord give before entering in Oregon?
Oregon landlords must give tenants at least 24 hours' actual notice before entering a rental unit, and may enter only at reasonable times.
'Actual notice' has teeth: it must genuinely reach the tenant — in person, by phone message, by a note securely attached to the front door, or by mail with three extra days added — and the tenant can veto a specific noticed entry by telling the landlord or posting a written denial, though unreasonably refusing lawful access is itself a lease violation. No notice is needed in an emergency, for agreed yard maintenance, or for seven days after a tenant submits a written repair request. A landlord who enters unlawfully or uses entry rights to harass owes the tenant actual damages of at least one month's rent (one week's rent for week-to-week tenancies), and the tenant may also get an injunction or end the tenancy; a tenant who unreasonably blocks access risks termination and actual damages in return.
Oregon entry notice at a glance
| Advance notice required | 24 hours |
|---|---|
| Notice standard | At least 24 hours' ACTUAL notice of intent to enter, and entry only at reasonable times (ORS 90.322(1)(f)). 'Actual notice' is a defined delivery standard under ORS 90.150: verbal notice given personally or left on the tenant's telephone answering device, written notice personally delivered, faxed, or attached in a secure manner to the main entrance, mailed notice (which is deemed served three days after mailing under ORS 90.155), or any other agreed written method reasonably calculated to achieve actual receipt. |
| Permitted reasons | To inspect the premises; make necessary or agreed repairs, decorations, alterations, or improvements; supply necessary or agreed services; perform agreed yard maintenance; or exhibit the unit to prospective or actual purchasers, mortgagees, tenants, workers, or contractors (ORS 90.322(1)). |
| Emergency exception | Yes |
| Time-of-day restrictions | Entry must occur at reasonable times; the statute fixes no clock hours. Unreasonableness is measured partly against the tenant's reasonable and specific plans to use the premises. |
Notes and caveats
Statute citations
- ORS 90.322 (1)(b), (1)(f), (7)-(8) Official source
- ORS 90.322 (section text on OregonLaws mirror) Unofficial mirror
- ORS 90.150 (service of actual notice) Unofficial mirror
How this record was verified: Dual-host reads of statute text: official Oregon Legislature ORS chapter pages (oregonlegislature.gov ors090.html and ors091.html) plus the oregon.public.law mirror (current through the 2023 ORS edition and 2024 session), with verbatim re-reads of ORS 90.323(2)-(6) and 90.324(1)-(2). Every load-bearing number (31-day deposit return, 2x penalty, 4th-day late-fee grace, 6%/day and 5%/5-day fee caps, 24 hours' actual notice, 90-day increase notice, first-year bar, once-per-12-months limit, 15-year exemption, 3-months-rent penalty, lesser-of-10%-or-7%+CPI formula) was read on both hosts. The annually-published cap figure was verified on the official DAS Office of Economic Analysis rent-stabilization page (fetched twice with different prompts) and cross-confirmed against the DAS newsroom press releases of 2025-09-30 and the 2025-10-01 correction: 9.5% for calendar 2026 (CPI-U West Region September 12-month average of 2.5%). 2026 short-session sweep via the Oregon Real Estate Agency's official 2026 Legislative Update: SB 1523, HB 4120, HB 4123 all enacted, none changes a v1 field.