What to know before you move: cost, market timing, who it fits.
Moving to Oregon: the honest read
Oregon has one of the highest top-bracket income taxes in the country (north of 9.9%) and no sales tax, which roughly favors lower earners and squeezes high ones — and the property-tax structure under Measure 5 and 50 means longtime owners often pay much less than newer buyers in the same neighborhood. The state really splits into the Willamette Valley corridor (Portland, Salem, Eugene — most of the population, the jobs, Nike and Intel and the universities, and a Portland that's in the middle of a difficult conversation about housing, homelessness, and downtown vacancies), the coast (beautiful, increasingly expensive, gray most of the year), and Central and Eastern Oregon (Bend has boomed and gotten expensive, the rest is high desert and ranching). Wildfire and smoke season is now a multi-month August-through-September fact. Winters in the Valley are mild and wet; the rain is the real weather conversation, not the cold.
If you're considering a move to Tigard, OR, the most important variables are the local housing market, the cost structure (taxes, insurance, utilities), and how well the city fits your day-to-day life. This page summarizes the housing market read; pair it with the cost of living page for the full picture.
Tigard is a city in Washington County, Oregon, with an estimated population of 57,301. It's part of the Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro metro area. The population grew 1.2% annually from 2020 to 2024, a moderate gain. The median home value in Tigard is $611,953 as of 2026-04, down 3.0% over the last 12 months. Over the last five years, home values have averaged +2.6% annual growth (-6.0% from the 5-year peak). Rents in Tigard average $1,853 per month, roughly flat year-over-year (-0.1%). The composite momentum score is 51 of 100 (Stable). Neither hot nor cold, so the neighborhood and the house matter more than the market read.
Sideways market (-3.0% YoY). No urgency to time the macro trend — focus on the home and neighborhood.
Reasons people move here
- Net positive migration: population up 1.2% per year — demand fundamentals are intact.
- The data is the data: Tigard has at least 5 years of Zillow tracking, full Census identification, and is included in the 2-criteria momentum score on this page.
Things to know first
- Cooling: -3.0% over the trailing year — momentum has stalled.
- Local nuance: city-level data smooths over neighborhood differences. School zones, HOA rules, and street-level character matter — visit before deciding.
More about Tigard
What this move will cost
Real upfront cash to land in Tigard, plus what you’ll carry month to month.
Cash to move in (renting)
| Rental | Typical rent | Cash to sign (1st + deposit) |
|---|---|---|
| Studio | $1,445/mo | $2,890 |
| 1-bed | $1,631/mo | $3,262 |
| 2-bed | $1,853/mo | $3,706 |
| 3-bed | $2,261/mo | $4,522 |
If you buy near the local median of $611,953, plan on about $5,263/yr in property tax (~$439/mo) at Oregon’s effective rate of 0.86%. Lenders escrow this on top of principal & interest.
Getting your stuff here
| Move size | Local movers (<100 mi) | Long-distance (1,000 mi+) |
|---|---|---|
| 1-bed home | $500–$1,100 | $1,700–$3,700 |
| 2-bed home | $900–$2,000 | $2,800–$6,000 |
| 3-bed home | $1,300–$2,800 | $4,000–$8,500 |
DIY truck rental instead of movers: about $150–$600 local, $1,200–$3,500 one-way long-distance, plus fuel. Ranges are national averages — your quote moves with exact distance, stairs/elevator access, and season (summer is priciest).
Your relocation checklist
The official, no-cost places to handle the paperwork after you decide on Tigard.
- Driver’s license & vehicle registrationOpen DMV →
New Oregon residents usually have 30–90 days to switch — confirm the exact deadline at the Oregon DMV. - Forward your mailUSPS change of address →
File a USPS change of address ($1.10 identity-verification fee) a week or two before you move. - Register to voteRegister / update →
Update your registration to your new Tigard address — the official, no-cost portal routes you to Oregon. - Turn on utilitiesFind providers →
Line up electric, gas, water/sewer, trash, and internet to start on move-in day. - Check the school districtLook up by address →
Enrollment is by address — confirm which schools serve the home you’re considering before you sign. - Update your address everywhere elseIRS address change →
Bank, insurance, employer/payroll, IRS, and your state tax agency. Auto and renters/home insurance rates can change with the ZIP.
Sources: Zillow ZHVI (home values), Zillow ZORI (rents), US Census ACS + place population. Updated when source agencies publish revisions.