Lane County · Southern Willamette Valley

Eugene — Oregon's College Town Done Right

University of Oregon energy, a genuine arts scene, Pre's Trail, and the 5th Street Public Market — all priced well below what Portland would charge for the same quality of life. Eugene rewards the buyer who looks past the stigma.

$450K
Eugene Median Sale Price
Q1 2026
$411K
Springfield Median
~9% less than Eugene
0.77%
Effective Tax Rate
Lane County — favorable
$2,775
True Monthly Cost at $350K
All-in (PITI + utilities)

Eugene & Springfield by the Numbers

Q1 2026 actuals. Eugene's median reflects a -7.5% YoY move — but that's volume compression, not price collapse. Long-term holders are fine. Buyers have negotiating room for the first time in years.

$450K
Eugene Median Sale Price
Jan 2026 actuals
$411K
Springfield Median Sale Price
More house, same metro
−7.5%
YoY Median Shift
Volume-driven, not crash
0.77%
Lane County Tax Rate
Lower than Portland's 0.98%
~$115
Monthly Electric (EWEB)
Eugene Water & Electric Board keeps bills down
$757
Avg Annual Insurance
Cheaper than Portland — low wildfire risk
2
Anchor Employers
University of Oregon + PeaceHealth (Level II Trauma)
Cedar Insight

Eugene's urban growth boundary creates real supply constraints — which is actually good for buyers who get in. You won't see sprawl eating the surrounding farmland and mountains. The inventory is limited by design, which supports long-term price stability despite short-term softness.

What Saturday Morning Feels Like

Saturday morning in Eugene starts at the Downtown Eugene Saturday Market — the original farmers market, running since 1970, with crafts, produce, and the particular Eugene energy of everyone having very specific opinions about everything. Then a run on Pre's Trail along the Willamette, where Prefontaine used to train and where serious runners still show up at 7am.

Breakfast at Grit Kitchen & Bar on Blair, then past the 5th Street Public Market — the nicest urban market in any Oregon city under 200K people. Wandering through the University of Oregon campus: the architecture is legitimately beautiful, the trees are old, and on a Saturday in spring it feels like what a college town should feel like.

Springfield — Eugene's often-overlooked sibling — is scrappier, cheaper, and has the kind of neighborhood grit that rewards patience. The Thurston neighborhood in Springfield is genuinely pleasant; schools are solid; you save $40–80K on equivalent properties. The stigma is legacy, not current reality.

The Eugene lifestyle pitch: McKenzie River for kayaking, the Cascades 45 minutes east, excellent road cycling infrastructure, a progressive food and arts scene, and a city that takes its coffee seriously. Portland charges 40–60% more for the same quality of life.

🎓
21K+
University of Oregon students anchoring the economy
🏃
Pre's Trail
Iconic running path along the Willamette River
🎨
Since 1970
Saturday Market — Oregon's oldest weekly craft & farmers market

Eugene & Springfield Neighborhoods

Seven distinct pockets. From South Hills character homes to Whiteaker DIY grit to Springfield value plays — here's what each delivers and who it's actually for.

South Hills
$600K–$900K+ · Eugene

The coveted Eugene address. Hillside properties with Cascade views and Willamette Valley panoramas. Large lots, mature trees, many homes backing to natural areas. The best schools in the Eugene 4J district. Quiet streets, a strong sense of permanence.

Views Top Schools Established Walkable to UO
South Eugene
$550K–$800K · Eugene

The sweet spot for families who want the UO adjacency without the full South Hills premium. Tree-lined streets, craftsman bungalows, walkable to campus and the Farmer's Market. Strong neighborhood associations and excellent elementary schools. Competitive at every price point.

Family Favorite UO Adjacent Craftsman Stock
Friendly Area
$450K–$650K · Eugene

Eugene's beloved neighborhood of neighborhoods. Local boutiques, cafes, and the Friendly Area Neighbors association that's been active for decades. Bungalows and mid-century homes, great walkability, a genuine mixed-income character that Eugene's progressive heart values. The Friendly Street Faire each October is not to be missed.

Walkable Local Character Mixed Income Community-Driven
Whiteaker
$380K–$520K · Eugene

Eugene's most eclectic neighborhood — part artist colony, part working-class history, part first-time buyer entry point. Home to Ninkasi Brewing, food carts, murals, and the WOW Hall. Smaller houses, original hardwoods where you find them, and a neighborhood identity that doesn't try to be anything other than what it is. Gentrifying slowly.

Arts & Culture Entry Price Brewery District Up-and-Coming
West Eugene
$380K–$550K · Eugene

More square footage per dollar than the eastern Eugene neighborhoods. Newer construction available in pockets. Bethel-Danebo district schools are improving. Less prestige than South Eugene but meaningful value — especially for buyers who need a 3-car garage or a larger yard. Industrial employment base nearby provides stable rental demand.

Value More Space Newer Stock Improving Schools
River Road
$400K–$580K · North Eugene

A quiet stretch along the Willamette with a loyal neighborhood following. Parks, bike paths, and a slower pace than the UO-adjacent areas. Mid-century ranches and split-levels dominate. Good value relative to South Eugene with a genuine community vibe. The North Eugene High School corridor has stabilized well.

River Access Bike-Friendly Mid-Century Stock Quiet
Springfield & Thurston
$330K–$500K · Springfield

Springfield gets unfairly dismissed. The Thurston area — southeast Springfield, bordering the hills — is genuinely pleasant: good schools (Thurston HS has strong programs), larger lots, newer construction pockets, and prices that make South Eugene buyers blink. You save $40–80K on an equivalent property. The stigma is 1990s-era legacy. In 2026, Springfield is the honest value play in this metro — and first-time buyers are figuring that out.

Best Value Larger Lots Solid Schools First-Time Buyer Undervalued
The Springfield Edge

Springfield's median is ~$39K below Eugene's. For a first-time buyer at the $400K price point, that gap is the difference between getting in and staying on the sideline. The Thurston neighborhood specifically offers 3-bed SFH at prices that are rare in the Eugene metro — and the schools have closed the quality gap meaningfully over the past decade.

True Monthly Cost in Eugene

The mortgage payment is just the beginning. Lane County taxes are among the more favorable in Oregon, and EWEB keeps utility bills down. Here's the real number at three price points.

At $350,000
$2,775/mo
  • Mortgage P&I: $1,991
  • PMI: $131
  • Property Tax: $225
  • Insurance: $63
  • Utilities: $300
  • Internet: $65
At $500,000
$3,807/mo
  • Mortgage P&I: $2,845
  • PMI: $188
  • Property Tax: $321
  • Insurance: $88
  • Utilities: $300
  • Internet: $65
At $750,000
$5,520/mo
  • Mortgage P&I: $4,268
  • PMI: $281
  • Property Tax: $481
  • Insurance: $125
  • Utilities: $300
  • Internet: $65
vs. Portland at $350K
$2,992/mo
  • Same mortgage: $1,991
  • Higher taxes: $286
  • Higher utilities: $422
  • Smaller house
  • $217/mo more expensive
  • No university energy
Hidden Annual Costs
+$485/mo
  • Maintenance (1%): $292
  • Landscaping: $100
  • Earthquake ins.: $33
  • Radon test (yr 1): $10
  • Based on $350K home
  • Budget accordingly

Eugene's Edge: $2,775/mo All-In at $350K

Eugene's Lane County tax rate (0.77%) and EWEB utility rates make it one of the most affordable true cost markets in Oregon. At the $350K price point, you're paying $217/mo less than an equivalent Portland home — and getting more square footage. The difference compounds: over 10 years, that's $26,000 back in your pocket.

Affordability Resources for Eugene Buyers

Eugene and Lane County have meaningful first-time buyer support — programs most buyers don't know exist until it's too late to use them. Start here before you start shopping.

Oregon Bond Residential Loan
Oregon Housing & Community Services

Oregon's flagship first-time buyer program. Below-market 30-year fixed rate loans for income-qualifying buyers. Income limits apply (Eugene/Lane County limits are higher than you'd expect — check OHCS for current figures). Can be combined with down payment assistance.

Below-Market Rate 30-Year Fixed Statewide
Oregon Down Payment Assistance
OHCS + Local Programs

Multiple down payment assistance programs layer on top of the Oregon Bond loan. The Cash Advantage program offers a cash grant (no repayment required) equal to 3% of the loan amount. The Rate Advantage program provides a slightly lower rate in lieu of the cash. Neither requires repayment if you stay in the home.

3% Grant No Repayment Stackable
USDA Rural Development Loans
Zero Down Payment

Parts of Lane County outside the Eugene UGB qualify for USDA Rural Development loans — zero down payment, competitive rates, and no PMI requirement. Springfield fringe areas and rural Lane County properties may qualify. Worth checking if your search extends beyond the core Eugene metro.

Zero Down No PMI Rural Areas
IDA Matched Savings Accounts
Individual Development Accounts

Oregon's IDA program matches savings contributions for low-to-moderate income first-time buyers. Save toward your down payment and receive a 3:1 match (up to program limits). Requires completion of homebuyer education. NEDCO (Neighborhood Economic Development Corp) administers this in the Lane County area.

3:1 Match Income-Based NEDCO
Lane County Homebuyer Education
Required for Most Programs

HUD-approved homebuyer education is required for Oregon Bond loans and most assistance programs — but it's also genuinely useful. NEDCO and Umpqua Community Development both offer Lane County-specific courses that cover local market conditions, inspection rights, and Eugene-specific financing options.

Required Local Focus NEDCO
FHA + Conventional at 3% Down
Low Down Payment Options

FHA loans remain the most flexible first-time buyer product: 3.5% down at 580+ credit score. Conventional 97 (Freddie Mac) requires just 3% down and no upfront MIP premium. At Eugene's $411K Springfield median, 3% down is $12,330 — meaningfully lower than the standard 20% assumption.

3–3.5% Down FHA + Conventional Credit Flexible
Stack Your Programs

The most powerful first-time buyer strategy in Lane County: Oregon Bond loan + Cash Advantage grant (3% no-repayment) + HUD-approved education certificate. Together, these can cut your out-of-pocket down payment significantly and lock in a below-market rate. Talk to a HUD-approved housing counselor through NEDCO before signing with any lender — it's free and often saves buyers thousands.

Risks in the Eugene Area

Eugene's risk profile is relatively mild compared to Southern Oregon or the Coast. But there are genuine concerns to understand — especially around flooding, earthquake exposure, and the single-industry employment base.

Willamette Valley Flooding

The Willamette floods. Eugene and Springfield have flood-prone areas — the 1996 flood caused $500M in damage statewide and displaced 30,000 people. FEMA maps don't catch all the risk: First Street Foundation estimates 2.5x more properties are at flood risk than official maps show. Eugene's NFIP average is ~$1,128/yr if your property falls in a designated flood zone.

Full flood risk guide →
Cascadia Subduction Zone

Eugene sits in the Willamette Valley — strong shaking, some liquefaction risk in low-lying river areas, no tsunami threat. Infrastructure will be severely impacted in a major CSZ event (water/sewer offline for weeks, roads damaged). Only ~20% of Oregon homeowners carry earthquake insurance, which is a real gap. Wood-frame homes in Eugene handle shaking better than masonry; budget $400–$800/yr for earthquake coverage.

Earthquake guide →
Single-Industry Employment

Eugene's economy runs on two pillars: the University of Oregon and PeaceHealth. Outside those sectors, private employment options are genuinely limited. Remote workers do well here; buyers dependent on local hiring can struggle. If your employment is UO-tied, great. If not, verify your income stability is not correlated with Eugene's local economy before committing to a mortgage.

Buyer's guide →
Urban Growth Boundary Constraints

Eugene's UGB limits sprawl — which supports long-term price stability but also means limited new construction supply. If you want a newer home with a large lot, you're often looking outside the UGB at higher land costs. The boundary also means inventory can tighten quickly when demand picks up, which it historically does when UO enrollment grows.

Supply dynamics →
The Rain

Eugene is in the Willamette Valley rain shadow — about 50 inches annually, more than Portland. October through April, you earn every sunny day. The gray is a genuine psychological factor that new arrivals consistently underestimate. This isn't a financial risk, but it's the reason many buyers who loved Eugene in summer return to California two winters later.

Climate context →
Radon — Low-Moderate Risk

Lane County is classified as EPA Zone 2 (moderate radon risk). Eugene doesn't have the concentrated hot spots that NE Portland does, but testing is still a smart move during your inspection period. A $25 test kit can save you a surprise. Mitigation if needed runs $800–$1,500 one-time — worth doing before you close rather than after.

Environmental risk guide →

Who Eugene Is Really For

Thrives Here

  • UO faculty, staff, and anyone tied to the university ecosystem
  • Remote workers who want a progressive, walkable small city at Portland prices minus 40%
  • Cyclists, trail runners, climbers — the outdoor access is genuinely world-class
  • First-time buyers who want to own before prices recover — the window is open now
  • Buyers who prioritize arts, culture, and community over career networking

Will Struggle Here

  • Anyone who needs strong private-sector job options — limited outside healthcare and education
  • Buyers who want new construction suburban neighborhoods — the UGB limits that
  • People who get rained on and take it personally — the winter is real
  • Buyers expecting fast equity gains — Eugene moves at Willamette Valley pace, not Bend pace
The One Thing to Verify First

Before buying in Eugene: confirm your employment or income is not correlated with the local economy. If you work remotely for an employer outside Lane County, you're insulated. If you're dependent on UO's budget cycle or local healthcare hiring — understand what happens to your income if those sectors contract. That's the only real financial risk in this market.

Eugene Intelligence,
Without the Commission Pressure

Cedar gives you real Eugene market data, neighborhood analysis, and first-time buyer program guidance — before you talk to a single agent. Tell us what you're looking for.

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