Low Compliance ComplexityOR

Oregon CAM Reconciliation Compliance Guide for Landlords

Statutory requirements, tenant audit rights, and landlord obligations for commercial CAM reconciliation in Oregon.

Primary Statute

ORS § 90.100 et seq. (Residential Landlord and Tenant Act); commercial governed by general contract law

Key Takeaway for Landlords

Oregon's no-sales-tax environment lowers the cost of maintenance and repairs passed through CAM. Measure 50's 3% assessment cap means taxable values often lag market values significantly — new construction or major improvements may trigger reassessment to current market value.

Reconciliation Timing Requirements

No statutory deadline for commercial CAM reconciliation.

Tenant Audit Rights

No statutory commercial tenant audit rights.

Required Disclosures

No statutory commercial CAM disclosure requirements.

Penalty Provisions

No CAM-specific penalties for commercial leases.

Regulatory Body

Oregon Real Estate Agency

Oregon CAM Context

Oregon has no state sales tax, reducing CAM costs for maintenance supplies, repairs, and capital expenditures. Property assessments are limited by Measure 50 (1997), which capped assessed values at 1995-96 levels with maximum 3% annual increases. Portland is the primary commercial market.

Validate Your Oregon Reconciliations

CapVeri catches gross-up errors, cap violations, and billing mistakes before tenants or auditors find them — from your Yardi or MRI exports.

Start Free Audit