Deficiency Balance Rules in Oregon
Oregon restricts but does not fully prohibit deficiency judgments after foreclosure. The statute imposes either a procedural barrier (judicial foreclosure requirement, FMV offset, short limitations period) or substantive cap on the amount the lender can recover. Knowing these limits is essential.
| Collateral | Deficiency Allowed? | Key Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Home / Real Estate | Restricted | No deficiency on residential trust deed foreclosures (ORS 86.797). |
| Vehicle / Personal Property | Allowed | Standard UCC Article 9 rules. |
Statute of Limitations
In Oregon, the statute of limitations on a deficiency balance (based on the written contract claim) is approximately 6 years from the date of the foreclosure or repossession sale. After that period expires, the debt is time-barred -- the creditor can still demand payment, but cannot enforce the debt through the courts.
Note: some states have a separate, shorter limitations period specifically for residential mortgage deficiencies. Always check current statute.
How Oregon Deficiency Debt Gets Discharged
A deficiency balance after foreclosure or repossession is unsecured debt. That is because the collateral is already gone -- the lender has nothing left to secure the balance with. Unsecured debt is dischargeable in both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13:
- Chapter 7: the deficiency is wiped out in about 90 days, along with credit cards, medical bills, and other unsecured debt.
- Chapter 13: the deficiency joins the pool of unsecured claims paid at a percentage (often pennies on the dollar) over 3-5 years. Whatever remains at plan completion is discharged.
See our bankruptcy and deficiency guide for full details.
Negotiating a Oregon Deficiency
Lenders often accept 20-40% of the deficiency in settlement because collection is uncertain and expensive. Key steps if you want to settle rather than file bankruptcy:
- Request a complete accounting of the debt, sale, and fees.
- Verify the sale was commercially reasonable (UCC 9-610 for auto; statute for real estate).
- Compare sale price to Kelley Blue Book wholesale (auto) or comparable sales (real estate).
- Offer 20-30% in a lump sum; be willing to go to 40% if needed.
- Get any settlement in writing, with explicit "full satisfaction of debt" language.
- Plan for the 1099-C tax consequence if the settled portion exceeds $600.
If the Oregon Lender Files a Lawsuit
If you ignore the deficiency demand and the lender sues, a default judgment allows them to garnish your wages and levy your bank accounts. In Oregon, the procedures and exemption amounts are set by state law. Do not ignore deficiency lawsuits -- respond by the deadline (usually 20-30 days).