Average homeowners insurance premium in Oregon: $1,280/year — ranked #43 most expensive state in the US.
Avg Annual Premium
$1,280
$990 below national avg
Top Risk Factor
Wildfire
FAIR Plan Available
Yes
Last-resort insurer of choice
| City | Avg Annual Premium | vs State Average |
|---|---|---|
| Portland | $1,420/yr | +10.9% |
| Salem | $1,250/yr | -2.3% |
| Eugene | $1,210/yr | -5.5% |
| Oregon Statewide Avg | $1,280/yr | -43.6% vs national |
Source: Rate estimates based on NAIC data and carrier filings, March 2026. Assumes a $300K dwelling, $1,000 deductible, good credit.
A standard HO-3 homeowners policy in Oregon provides broad coverage across six key areas:
Dwelling (Coverage A)
Repairs or rebuilds your home's structure after a covered loss such as fire, windstorm, or hail.
Other Structures (Coverage B)
Covers detached garages, fences, sheds, and other structures on your property (typically 10% of Coverage A).
Personal Property (Coverage C)
Replaces belongings — furniture, electronics, clothing — damaged or stolen (typically 50–70% of Coverage A).
Loss of Use (Coverage D)
Pays additional living expenses if your home becomes uninhabitable while repairs are completed.
Personal Liability (Coverage E)
Protects you if someone is injured on your property or you accidentally damage others' property.
Medical Payments (Coverage F)
Covers minor medical bills for guests injured on your property, regardless of fault.
Oregon's 2020 Labor Day fires — which burned more than 1 million acres in a single week and destroyed thousands of homes — triggered a major reassessment of wildfire risk by insurance carriers operating in the state. Several carriers have since reduced or paused writing in high-fire-risk areas, and some Oregon homeowners, particularly in the Cascade foothills, Rogue Valley, and coastal range, have faced non-renewals.
Oregon does not have a state FAIR Plan, creating a coverage gap for homeowners who lose private market access. The Oregon Insurance Division has been working on market availability solutions, but as of 2024–2025, homeowners in wildfire-risk areas who cannot obtain admitted market coverage must turn to surplus lines carriers, which are more expensive and less regulated. Documenting all wildfire mitigation measures — defensible space, Class A roofing, ember-resistant vents — is important when applying for surplus lines coverage.
Oregon also has significant flood and landslide risk, particularly in the Coast Range and along the Willamette, Umpqua, and Rogue rivers. The Cascadia Subduction Zone is the primary earthquake hazard for the entire Pacific Northwest, and Oregon homeowners should seriously consider earthquake insurance, as a major Cascadia event could cause catastrophic losses across much of western Oregon.
Compare quotes from at least 3–5 insurers — rates for the same home can vary by $500–$1,500+ in Oregon.
Bundle your homeowners and auto insurance with the same carrier for a typical 10–25% multi-policy discount.
Install wind mitigation features — impact-resistant roof, storm shutters, or hurricane straps — which can cut premiums significantly in storm-prone regions.
Raise your deductible from $500 to $1,000 or $2,500 to meaningfully lower your annual premium, provided you can cover the out-of-pocket cost after a loss.
Ask about loyalty, claims-free, new home, and security system discounts — most carriers offer 5–15% off for each qualifying factor.
Oregon operates a FAIR (Fair Access to Insurance Requirements) Plan, a state-mandated insurer of last resort for homeowners who cannot obtain coverage in the standard market — often due to high-risk location or prior claims. FAIR Plan coverage is typically more limited and more expensive than standard policies. It should be used as a temporary solution while you work to qualify for the traditional insurance market.
Michael Torres
Editorial Lead, Property & Casualty
This article was researched and written by the Cover Forge USA editorial team against federal sources (NAIC, CMS, FEMA, DOL, SSA, state DOIs) and standard policy forms. Bylines organize content by topic — they do not assert individual licensure. See our editorial-policy for details.
Reviewed 2026-06-14
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Important Disclaimer
This site provides general educational information only and is not a substitute for professional insurance advice. All rates, data, and coverage details are estimates and may not reflect your actual premiums. Insurance availability and pricing vary by state, insurer, and individual risk factors. Always consult a licensed insurance professional in your state before making coverage decisions.