Short-Term or Long-Term Rental in Portland: What the Numbers Show
Verdict: Long-term rental only — Portland's primary-residence rule effectively bans investor short-term rentals. Long-term rental yields approximately 3.6% gross, below both the Oregon and national averages, making this an appreciation play rather than a cash flow market.
Best For: Appreciation-focused investors comfortable with thin cash flow, betting on Portland's long-term price growth in a supply-constrained market.
Scores out of 10 across yield, regulations, tax, risk, and market fundamentals. How we score
Underlying Assumptions (data as of April 2026):
- Property Price: 3-bedroom houses estimated at around $639,791
- Monthly Long-Term Rent: Approximately $1,912
- Regulations: Short-term rental (STR) banned for investor-owned properties; Portland enforces a primary-residence-only rule requiring the host to live on-site
See your neighborhood's full long-term rental breakdown in the dashboard
Estimates for a typical 3-bedroom house. Short-term rental is not available to investors in this market.
Portland's property prices sit well above both the Oregon and national medians. Rents are also higher, but not proportionally; the result is a gross yield of 3.6%, which falls below both the state average of 3.8% and the national average of 4.9%. This is a classic premium-market pattern: strong demand and limited housing supply push prices up faster than rents, compressing yields.
Investors chasing pure cash flow will find better numbers elsewhere in Oregon. Rural markets like Burns (Harney County) and Butte Falls (Jackson County) offer gross yields above 7%, though they come with lower liquidity and less appreciation potential. The trade-off in Portland is accepting a thin yield today in exchange for a large, liquid market with historically strong price growth.
Tax Implications for Portland Long-Term Rental Investors
Oregon has no sales tax, but it does have a state income tax, and rental income is fully taxable. The top marginal rate is 9.9%, among the highest in the country. Portland adds its own local income taxes, pushing the combined burden even higher. This is a meaningful drag on net returns compared to investing in no-income-tax states like Washington, Nevada, or Texas.
Depreciation partially offsets this tax burden. On a property valued at $639,791, the depreciable building value (80% of the purchase price) is approximately $511,833. Spread over a 27.5-year schedule, this creates an annual paper deduction of roughly $18,612. For a property generating $18,612 in net operating income, the depreciation deduction can create a paper loss, sheltering rental income from taxation and potentially offsetting other income depending on the investor's participation level.
Mortgage interest is fully deductible on Schedule E for rental properties, with no SALT cap limitation. Investors who exit the market can use a 1031 exchange to defer capital gains by reinvesting into another qualifying property. Given Portland's relatively high state tax rates, these federal deductions are particularly valuable here.
Closing costs and transfer taxes apply when purchasing; check current rates with a local real estate attorney, as these vary and change periodically.
Portland's Appreciation Potential Is the Core Investment Case
Portland has historically been one of the stronger appreciation markets in the Pacific Northwest, driven by population growth, tech-sector employment, and geographic constraints (the urban growth boundary limits sprawl). While a 3.6% gross yield will not excite cash-flow investors, total returns including appreciation have been competitive over longer hold periods.
The entry price range within Multnomah County is also wider than the median suggests. Prices for 3-bedroom houses run from approximately $445,897 to $1,162,243, meaning investors can target more affordable pockets, like Lents/Foster (97266) or Eliot/Boise (97227), where yields are higher and the appreciation upside remains intact. For apartment investors, 2-bedroom units are estimated at around $333,165 with rents of approximately $1,341 per month, offering a different entry point with potentially tighter yields but lower capital requirements.
The short-term rental ban actually supports long-term rental returns indirectly: it keeps investor-owned housing stock in the long-term market, supporting tenant supply and reducing the competitive pressure that Airbnb conversions create in other cities.
Investment Bottom Line
Portland is not a cash-flow market. At 3.6% gross (1.2% net after costs), investors need appreciation to generate competitive total returns. The short-term rental ban removes any option to boost income through Airbnb; this is a long-term rental market, full stop. Oregon's high state income tax further compresses after-tax returns, though depreciation provides meaningful shelter.
The investment case rests on three factors: Portland's historically strong price appreciation, stable tenant demand in a supply-constrained market, and the significant yield variation between suburbs that lets investors optimise entry point. Lents/Foster (97266) at 5.9% gross tells a very different story than the county-wide average.
| Investor Type | Fit |
|---|---|
| Cash Flow Focused | Poor |
| Appreciation Focused | Good |
| Short-Term Rental Operator | Not Viable |
| High Leverage (80%+ LTV) | Poor |
For investors who want short-term rental income in Oregon, the Oregon state hub covers markets where it is legal and profitable. For those committed to Portland, the dashboard provides suburb-level breakdowns across all 33 ZIP codes, helping you identify the specific pockets where the numbers work for your strategy. You can also explore our data sources and market score methodology for details on how these figures are calculated.
Data reflects market conditions as of April 2026.
See your neighborhood's full long-term rental breakdown
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This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Regulations and market conditions change frequently. Verify current rules with local authorities before making investment decisions.