Oregon forecloses on a trust deed under the Oregon Trust Deed Act, but with borrower protections that stretch the timeline: a recorded Notice of Default, a required mediation for residential loans, and a sale set at least 120 days after the notice. That long window keeps the owner reachable. Skip-traced, DNC-scrubbed, pulled fresh. Filter by county or ZIP across all 36 counties. $0.22 a row, $0.50 minimum, no subscription.
Oregon foreclosures run on a trust deed under the Oregon Trust Deed Act, but with notice and mediation protections that make it slow. Three public steps, and our list is the first.
The lender records a Notice of Default and election to sell after the borrower is 120 days delinquent. Owner still on title and reachable, with a long window. Your list.
For residential trust deeds, the lender must offer mediation, which is scheduled within weeks. The owner stays engaged while a deal can still be reached.
The notice sets the trustee sale at least 120 days out, published four weeks. Owner gone once the sale is final.
Live active-inventory volume from our own data, pulled at order. Portland metro (Multnomah, Washington, Clackamas) leads. Pull any single county or combine several.
Leading counties by current inventory · live count shown before you pay · ~1,458 statewide
Not just an address and a flag. A scored, contactable, deal-ready profile, 90+ columns per row.
of records return at least one phone. Owner-occupied Oregon traces well.
Every phone checked against the Do-Not-Call registry before you download.
Owner identity, equity, mortgage, lender, distress flags, property detail, propensity scores.
The live count you see before you pay is the count in your Oregon county right now. Most services cache monthly snapshots; we query at order time. Major-metro recorders update same-week.
Pay-as-you-go, no subscription required. You only pay for delivered rows, $0.50 minimum. Pull 50 Multnomah leads for a test and pay eleven dollars.
Running steady volume? An optional subscription drops your per-row rate. Subscribe only when the volume makes it cheaper. See plans.
Get started →Oregon notice and mediation steps stretch the non-judicial clock, keeping the owner reachable for months. Four buyer types work it four different ways.
The core buyer. Cash offer around 60-70% ARV, owner avoids a foreclosure on their credit report. Needs hard-money or private-capital backing.
Negotiate a discounted payoff with the lender on the owner behalf. Lower margin per deal, more deals per list.
Lend enough to cure the default, take a first-lien position, refi out later. Low conversion, high ticket.
Owners hit with a default notice are actively searching for help, and direct attorney outreach at this window converts well.
Most "pre-foreclosure" lists are dressed-up proxies: 90+ days late plus high loan-to-value. Oregon gives a clean recorded signal, and we use it.
Oregon forecloses without a lawsuit, on a trust deed under the Oregon Trust Deed Act, but with strong notice protections. The recorded Notice of Default is the public step. Oregon returns about 1,500 active, the order of magnitude of true inventory, not a six-figure proxy dump.
The Notice of Default follows 120 days of delinquency, residential loans require mediation, and the sale is set at least 120 days out. One of the longer non-judicial timelines, so the owner stays reachable for months.
Owner identity, skip-traced phones and emails, estimated equity, mortgage balance and lender. 90+ columns, so you score an Oregon deal before you call.
The recorder-document detail (exact NOD date, amount, scheduled sale date) is not in the file. You get the flag, the owner, the equity picture, and the contact path, pulled fresh. Filings are public record, so we do not promise exclusivity.
The tools usually recommended for Oregon pre-foreclosure data are $50-100-a-month subscriptions, billed whether or not you pull a single list. We charge by the row, with an optional plan for high-volume teams.
Pull 50 Multnomah leads for a test campaign and pay eleven dollars. Pull 5,000 across Oregon next month and pay for 5,000. Never pay for a month you didn't use.
The things Oregon buyers actually ask before their first list.
About 1,500 Oregon owners in the trust-deed foreclosure process, skip-traced and DNC-scrubbed. Reach them across a long window, while they still hold the keys.
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