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    State-Specific Template

    Oregon Residential Lease Agreement Template

    A complete residential lease agreement drafted in accordance with Oregon landlord-tenant law. Covers late fee limits, security deposit rules, required disclosures, entry notice requirements, and notice-to-quit procedures, so you can rent with confidence from day one.

    What's Included
    • Drafted in accordance with Oregon landlord-tenant law
    • Oregon-compliant late fee clause (5% of monthly rent)
    • Security deposit provisions matching state limits
    • Property condition disclosure section
    • Maintenance and repair responsibility clauses
    • Move-in and move-out procedures
    • Pet policy addendum template
    • Word and PDF formats included
    • Lifetime access with unlimited downloads
    Oregon Key Compliance Rules
    Quick-reference figures sourced from Oregon landlord-tenant statutes. Verify with current law before use.
    Late Fee Limit5% of monthly rent
    Grace Period4 days required by law
    Security Deposit LimitNo statutory limit. Typically 1-2 months by market norm.
    Deposit Return Deadline31 days
    Entry Notice Required24 hours
    Notice to Quit (Non-Payment)3 days

    Important Notes

    4-day grace period required

    Late fee capped at 5%

    72-hour notice for non-payment eviction

    Why a Oregon-Specific Lease Matters

    Oregon requires 5 specific disclosures and follows a 'reasonableness' standard for late fees and other contested clauses. A generic template usually misses 4 of these required disclosures and uses late-fee language that Oregon courts have struck down as punitive rather than reasonable.

    Oregon has no statutory cap on security deposits, but the 31-day return deadline still applies and is strictly enforced. The most common landlord violation isn't charging too much. It's missing the return deadline. Oregon's window starts when the tenant vacates. A generic template usually leaves the trigger ambiguous, which courts interpret against the landlord.

    Oregon requires the following disclosures: Lead-based paint (pre-1978), Flood zone, Smoke detector info, Recycling info, Carbon monoxide info. Each one carries its own risk if omitted. Failing to deliver the Lead-based paint (pre-1978) disclosure, for instance, can give the tenant grounds to void the lease or seek statutory damages under federal and state law.

    Oregon permits tenants to recover double damages for specific landlord violations, most commonly mishandling of security deposits or non-disclosure of required terms. Using a non-compliant lease isn't a paperwork issue. It's exposure to multi-thousand-dollar liability on a single dispute, even before attorney's fees.

    Who Uses This Template

    Small Landlords

    1-20 rental units

    First-Time Landlords

    Getting started right

    Property Managers

    Professional documents

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Legal Disclaimer

    This template is provided for general informational purposes and is not a substitute for legal advice. Landlord-tenant laws change frequently. We recommend consulting an Oregon-licensed attorney before using this template for a specific tenancy. RentLateFee.com makes no warranty that this template will be enforceable in any particular dispute.

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    Word and PDF formats included

    Need help calculating late fees for Oregon?

    Oregon Late Fee Calculator

    Learn about Oregon late fee rules.

    Late Fee Notice Template