Oregon Eviction Notice Forms

Last Updated: March 13, 2024 by Roberto Valenzuela

An Oregon eviction notice form is a legal demand for a tenant to comply with the terms of the rental agreement or else move out of the premises. Oregon landlords may deliver an eviction notice because of unpaid rent, lease violations, or illegal activity on the rental property.

Types of Oregon Eviction Notice Forms

Notice Form Grounds Curable?
72 Hour Notice To Quit Unpaid Rent

All Tenancies

Yes
144 Hour Notice To Quit Unpaid Rent

All Tenants, Except Weekly

Yes
7 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate Lease Violation

Week-to-Week Tenants

Yes
30 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate Lease Violation

All Tenants, Except Weekly

Yes
10 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate Pet Violation

All Tenancies

Yes
4 Day Notice To Vacate Repeat Violation

Week-to-Week Tenants

No
10 Day Notice To Quit Repeat Violation

All Tenants, Except Weekly

No
24 Hour Notice To Quit Illegal Activity

All Tenancies

No
48 Hour Notice To Comply or Vacate Lease Violation

Drug/Alcohol Free Housing

Yes
24 Hour Notice To Vacate Repeat Violation

Drug/Alcohol Free Housing

No
30 Day Notice To Quit Falsification of Rental Application

All Tenancies

No
30 Day Notice To Vacate Monthly / Fixed Term Lease

Gov’t Agency Deems Premises Unsafe

No

Oregon 72 Hour Notice To Quit

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An Oregon 72 Hour Notice To Quit eviction evicts a tenant for nonpayment of rent. For this form of notice, rent is considered late on or after the 5th calendar day of a given rental period in week-to-week tenancies and on or after the 8th calendar day for other types of tenancy.

The tenant must pay the past due balance, or else move out within 72 hours.

note
When counting calendar days of a rental period to determine correct date of service, include the first day rent is due.

Oregon 144 Hour Notice To Quit

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An Oregon 144 Hour Notice To Quit evicts a tenant for nonpayment of rent. This form of notice cannot be used for week-to-week tenancies. For purposes of this notice, rent is considered late on or after the 5th calendar day of a given rental period. 

The tenant must pay the past due balance, or else move out within 144 hours.

note
When counting calendar days of a rental period to determine correct date of service, include the first day rent is due.

Oregon 7 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate

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An Oregon 7 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate applies to week-to-week tenancies and demands correction of a lease violation that is “curable,” i.e., the tenant gets a chance to fix the situation rather than be evicted. A curable lease violation might include failure to maintain health and safety on the rental property, interfering with the quiet enjoyment of neighbors, or refusal to allow lawful entry by the landlord.

The tenant must take appropriate corrective action within four (4) calendar days, or else move out within seven (7) calendar days.

Oregon 30 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate

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An Oregon 30 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate applies to all tenancies other than week-to-week and demands correction of a lease violation that is “curable,” i.e., the tenant gets a chance to fix the situation rather than be evicted. A curable lease violation might include failure to maintain health and safety on the rental property, interfering with the quiet enjoyment of neighbors, or refusal to allow lawful entry by the landlord.

The tenant must take appropriate corrective action within fourteen (14) calendar days, or else move out within thirty (30) calendar days.

Oregon 10 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate

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An Oregon 10 Day Notice To Comply or Vacate evicts tenants who have a pet capable of injury or damage to other persons or the rental property. The tenant must remove the pet from the premises, or else move out within ten (10) calendar days.

Oregon 4 Day Notice To Vacate

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An Oregon 4 Day Notice To Vacate evicts a week-to-week tenant for repeating a lease violation within a six (6) month period. The tenant is not given an opportunity to take corrective action, and must move out within four (4) calendar days.

Oregon 10 Day Notice To Quit

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An Oregon 10 Day Notice To Quit evicts tenants other than week-to-week tenants, for repeating a lease violation within a six (6) month period. The tenant is not given an opportunity to take corrective action, and must move out within ten (10) calendar days.

Oregon 24 Hour Notice To Quit

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An Oregon 24 Hour Notice To Quit evicts tenants who commit illegal activity on the premises, such as possessing controlled substances or committing burglary. This notice also applies to situations where the tenant, a guest, or pet threatens or inflicts substantial injury or damage to the premises or to other persons. The tenant is not given an opportunity to take corrective action, and must move out within twenty-four (24) hours.

Oregon 48 Hour Notice To Comply or Vacate

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An Oregon 48 Hour Notice To Comply or Vacate evicts tenants for a first time violation of an alcohol and controlled substance distribution policy, when they have resided in alcohol- and drug-free housing for less than two (2) years. The tenants must take corrective action within twenty-four (24) hours, or else move out within forty-eight (48) hours.

Oregon 24 Hour Notice To Vacate

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An Oregon 24 Hour Notice To Vacate evicts tenants for repeated violations of alcohol and controlled substance distribution, when they have resided in alcohol- and drug-free housing for less than two (2) years. The tenant is not given an opportunity to take corrective action, and must move out within twenty-four (24) hours.

note
This notice may also be used to evict a tenant for a first-time violation of an alcohol and drug distribution policy, if the tenant has resided in in alcohol- and drug-free housing for more than two (2) years.

Oregon 30 Day Notice To Quit

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An Oregon 30 Day Notice To Quit evicts a tenant for falsifying a record of criminal conviction within the past year on a rental application, in a way that materially affects the landlord’s acceptance of the application. The tenant is not given an opportunity to take corrective action, and must move out within thirty (30) calendar days.

Oregon 30 Day Notice To Vacate

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An Oregon 30-Day Notice To Vacate terminates a rental agreement, including a month-to-month lease in accordance with state law. Tenants may use this notice to terminate a month-to-month or fixed-term lease, and this notice may also terminate an expired lease or a situation with no written lease where the tenant pays rent monthly. The non-terminating party must receive notice at least thirty (30) calendar days before the date of termination.

During the first year of tenancy, landlords may use this notice to terminate a month-to-month or fixed-term lease. Afterward, landlords must have cause or a qualifying reason to terminate. There are certain cases involving sale which allow termination with 30 days of notice, but most terminations that are not evictions require more notice from the landlord.

How To Write an Eviction Notice in Oregon       

To help ensure the legal compliance of an eviction notice:

  1. Use the tenant’s full name and address
  2. Specify the lease violation as well as any balance due
  3. Specify the date of termination
  4. Print name and sign the notice, including the landlord’s address of record
  5. Note the date and method of notice delivery, along with printed name and signature

It is easy to lose an otherwise justified legal action because of improper notice. Check carefully to ensure enough time after notice is delivered, not when it’s sent.

How To Calculate Expiration Date in Oregon

The “clock” for an eviction notice period starts “ticking” the day after the notice gets delivered (served). For example, to give at least 30 days of notice and begin court action as of June 30th, delivery of the eviction notice must be no later than May 31st. 

Unlike most jurisdictions, in Oregon the last day of a notice period is not extended if it falls on a weekend or legal holiday. In addition, a notice for a number of hours (rather than days) takes place immediately upon personal delivery, or at 11:59pm on the date of service if it’s posted or mailed.

How To Serve an Eviction Notice in Oregon  

Oregon landlords may deliver an eviction notice using any of these methods:

  1. Hand delivery to the other party
  2. Delivery by first class mail
  3. Only if agreed in writing: Posting at a conspicuous place on the tenant’s premises, PLUS delivery by first class mail, addressed to the tenant at the premises
  4. Only if agreed through a special written addendum to the rental agreement: Delivery by email, PLUS delivery by first class mail

Mailing a notice extends the notice period by three (3) calendar days, to account for variable delivery times.

Electronic Notice in Oregon

Oregon does allow electronic delivery of notice in special cases. Electronic notice must be agreed in a written addendum to the rental agreement, which complies with the following requirements:

  1. Agreement executed AFTER the tenancy has begun and the tenant has moved in
  2. Specifies an email address where the landlord agrees to send and receive notifications
  3. Specifies an email address where the tenant agrees to send and receive notifications
  4. Allows either party to change their specified email address, or cancel electronic communications, with three days of advance notice
  5. Contains the following language:

THIS IS AN IMPORTANT NOTICE ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS REGARDING RECEIPT OF WRITTEN NOTICES.

By signing this addendum, you agree to receive written notices from your landlord by e-mail. This may include important legal notices, including rent increase and tenancy termination notices. Failure to read or respond to a written notice could result in you losing your housing or being unaware of a change in rent. Signing this addendum is voluntary. Only agree to service of written notices electronically if you check your e-mail regularly.

 

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