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Find Legal Help On Retaliation & Wrongful Entry by Landlords
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Landlord-Tenant Law in Oregon 2007, Booklet Addendum This link opens a PDF file in a new window.  If you do not have an accessible Acrobat Reader, a link is provided at the bottom of this page.
By: Oregon Law Center and Legal Aid Services of Oregon
Retaliation by a Landlord
By: Legal Aid Services of Oregon
Landlord-Tenant Law in Oregon This link opens a PDF file in a new window.  If you do not have an accessible Acrobat Reader, a link is provided at the bottom of this page.
By: Legal Aid Services of Oregon   WPD File
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Entering Your Rented Space
by: Legal Aid Services of Oregon
TIME LIMIT WARNING: Under state and federal laws there are time limits for taking action to enforce your rights. Most lawsuits related to the rental agreement and the Oregon Residential Landlord and Tenant Act must be filed (started in court) within one year of the incident. There may be other - shorter - time limits that apply in other cases. Ask a lawyer about the time limits that could apply in your situation.

Does my landlord have a right to enter the rented space?

Yes, at reasonable times and with reasonable frequency.  But the landlord must have a reasonable purpose, such as to inspect the rental unit or to supply necessary or agreed upon services, and must give you a 24 hour verbal or written notice before entering, with a few exceptions. A landlord does not need to give a 24 hour verbal notice to enter your dwelling or your yard if the landlord is:

  • Posting a legally permissible or required notice on your door (the landlord may enter only your yard for this reason, not your home); or
  • Doing yard work that the written rental agreement requires the landlord to do (the landlord may only enter your yard for this reason, not your home); or
  • Responding to an emergency at any time, which includes a repair problem that may cause serious damage to the premises if not fixed immediately (the landlord must notify the tenant that the entry was made within 24 hours after the entry); or
  • Entering with the tenant?s permission, in the case of a specific entry; or
  • Responding to a tenant?s written request for repairs and either entering during reasonable times or, if the tenant has specified allowable and reasonable times for entry in their written request, entering within those specified times.  However, the landlord must initiate the repairs within 7 days of the tenant?s written request in order to enter without giving notice, and may continue to enter without giving notice in order to complete those repairs, as long as the landlord is making a reasonable effort to complete the repairs in a timely  manner; or
  • Showing the property to a prospective buyer at reasonable times, but only if both the landlord and tenant have signed a written agreement to allow this that is separate from the rental agreement and that went into effect while the landlord was actively trying to sell the property.
  • The landlord can also enter your property in cases involving a court order, a requirement from a government agency, or your abandonment of the property.

You have the right to deny entry to the landlord for good reasons; you must tell the landlord the reasons before the time the landlord intends to enter.  Tenants can be evicted for unreasonably denying entry.

If a landlord enters the property without following these rules, a tenant can sue and ask for damages caused by the entry or one month's rent (one week's rent for weekly renters), whichever is more.  ORS 90.322

(See Time Limit Warning.)

Last Reviewed On: 11/29/07
 
 

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