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Land Sale Oregon: What Every Seller Must Know Before Listing

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Land Sale Oregon: What Every Seller Must Know Before Listing

A land sale in Oregon is one of the most significant financial events most property owners will experience — and most sellers go into it without understanding the process. That gap in knowledge is where deals fall apart and money gets left on the table.

This guide covers everything: the contract, due diligence, Oregon’s title and escrow process, closing costs, and the tax strategy that belongs at the beginning of the conversation, not the end.


The Purchase and Sale Agreement

Once you accept an offer, the purchase and sale agreement governs everything. For Oregon land transactions, key provisions include:

  • Purchase price and earnest money — amount, form, and deposit timeline

  • Due diligence period — typically 30–60 days for land, longer than for homes

  • Contingencies — financing, inspection, zoning verification, survey

  • Closing date and any extension rights

  • Seller disclosures — what you know about the property must be stated clearly

Warning

Vague contract language creates disputes. I review every offer with my clients line by line to ensure your interests are protected before you sign anything.


The Due Diligence Period

During due diligence, the buyer investigates your land before committing fully. Oregon land buyers typically examine:

What Buyers Investigate During Oregon Land Due Diligence
  • Boundary survey & title — Critical

  • Zoning & permitted uses — Critical

  • Water rights & well records — Very important

  • Environmental review — Important

  • Timber/agricultural assessment — Important

  • Road access & easements — Very important

Sellers who provide a complete documentation package at the start of due diligence close faster and at better prices. Sellers who scramble to find documents lose buyer confidence — and sometimes the deal.


Oregon’s Title and Escrow System

Oregon is a title insurance and escrow state. Closings are handled by title companies — not attorneys. The title company:

  • Examines the chain of ownership and identifies liens or encumbrances

  • Issues title insurance to the buyer

  • Prepares closing documents and coordinates signing

  • Disburses all funds at closing — including payoff of any liens and your net proceeds

Land closings are more complex than residential closings when water rights, timber rights, or multiple parcels are involved. I work with title companies that specialize in Oregon land transactions.


What Sellers Pay at Closing

Closing Cost Item

Real Estate Commission
Typical Amount: 5–6% of sale price
Notes: Negotiable; covers buyer & listing agent

Title Insurance & Escrow
Typical Amount: $1,500 – $4,000+
Notes: Split by custom; depends on price

Prorated Property Taxes
Typical Amount: Varies
Notes: Your share through closing date

Lien Payoffs
Typical Amount: Varies
Notes: Back taxes, mortgages, judgments

Capital Gains Tax
Typical Amount: Up to ~30%
Notes: Deferrable via 1031 exchange


Capital Gains: The Number Most Sellers Ignore

Combined federal (up to 20%) and Oregon state capital gains taxes (up to 9.9%) can consume nearly 30% of your land’s appreciation.

A 1031 exchange defers this completely — but only if structured before closing. This is the conversation I have with every client before we list.

Key Numbers

30%
Max combined capital gains tax (federal + Oregon)

$0
Capital gains due with a properly executed 1031 exchange

180 Days
Time allowed to close on replacement property

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