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2026 Lease Renewal Tactics for Oregon Landlords: Retaining Quality Tenants in a Stabilizing Market
In this stabilizing market, losing a good tenant can hit your wallet hard—think one to two months' rent lost to vacancy, plus cleaning, minor repairs, marketing, and screening new applicants. That's easily $4,000 to $6,000 on a $2,000-a-month unit. Ouch, right? But retaining a quality tenant? That's pure gold. They know the property, pay on time (mostly), and treat the place like home. With inbound migration keeping demand steady, why risk the winter leasing slowdown? Smart l

Christian Bryant
Jan 124 min read


January Deadline Alert: 1099-NEC Requirements for Oregon Landlords – Avoid IRS Penalties in 2026
it's January 7, 2026, and if you're like me, you're probably still recovering from the holidays while gearing up for tax season. But before you dive into those Schedule E deductions for your rental properties, there's one federal requirement that sneaks up on a lot of us every year: issuing 1099-NEC forms to contractors. Miss it, and the IRS can hit you with penalties that start small but add up fast. Trust me, I've seen too many good landlords get caught off-guard by this, s

Christian Bryant
Jan 75 min read


Multnomah County Rental Laws: Your 2026 Guide to Staying Compliant as a Portland-Area Landlord
But for those properties in unincorporated Multnomah County—those spots outside Portland, Gresham, or other cities—the county steps in on health and safety enforcement. It's limited compared to the big state and city rules, but ignore it and you could face inspections, notices, and fines faster than you can say "habitability violation." Let's break it all down, with extra time on the county specifics since that's where a lot of you have questions.

Christian Bryant
Jan 25 min read


Home Forward Rent Increase Pause: Is it Legal and What Oregon Section 8 Landlords Need to Know for 2026
If you rent to Housing Choice Voucher (HCV, better known as Section 8) holders through Home Forward, you've probably already seen the letter dated December 3, 2025, announcing a full pause on approving any rent increases effective on or after April 1, 2026, through March 31, 2027. Yeah, that's a full year with no bumps allowed, even on lease renewals.

Christian Bryant
Jan 24 min read
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