Oregon has a reputation it doesn't quite deserve — the outdoor beauty, the food culture, the Pacific Northwest identity are all genuine and beloved. What's also genuine is Oregon's income tax rate of up to 9.9%, which ranks among the highest in the western United States, and Portland's 144 annual rain days, which deliver a gray, overcast October through May that wears on residents far more than the tourism brochures suggest. The result is a consistent and growing flow of Oregon residents — particularly from Portland, Beaverton, Hillsboro, and Eugene — choosing Phoenix and the East Valley as their next home.
This guide is written specifically for Oregon residents. The tax analysis reflects Oregon's unusual graduated structure. The neighborhood comparisons run from Portland's distinct districts to their East Valley equivalents. And the Intel connection — one of Oregon's largest employers, also one of Arizona's — gets the specific attention it deserves.
"Portland sees 144 days of precipitation per year. Phoenix gets 299 days of sunshine. That's not a minor weather preference — it's a fundamentally different daily life."
Why Oregon Residents Are Moving to Phoenix
The Oregon-to-Phoenix migration is driven by a specific set of factors that converge in 2026 more sharply than at any prior point:
- Oregon's income tax is among the highest in the West. At rates up to 9.9%, Oregon taxes income more aggressively than California's equivalent brackets for many professional households. The 6.75% bracket kicks in quickly and applies to the majority of working Oregonians. For a household earning $200,000, Oregon income taxes run approximately $13,500 annually — compared to Arizona's $5,000 flat. The $8,500 annual gap is real and recurring.
- Portland's livability challenges have accelerated outmigration. Portland experienced significant public safety and quality-of-life challenges beginning around 2020. While recovery efforts are ongoing, many long-time Portland residents and suburban families made the decision to leave — and Phoenix was the most common Sun Belt destination for Pacific Northwest outmigration.
- 144 rainy days is a mental health issue, not just a weather preference. Most of Oregon's precipitation falls as a persistent gray drizzle rather than dramatic rain, and the overcast sky runs from October through May. Phoenix's 299 sunny days are not a marketing number — they represent a fundamental change in daily light exposure, outdoor activity access, and seasonal mood cycle. Oregon transplants in Phoenix consistently identify this as the quality-of-life gain they underestimated most.
- Intel Hillsboro → Intel Chandler is a defined career path. Intel's largest US manufacturing campus is in Hillsboro, Oregon (20,000+ employees). Intel's Arizona campus in Chandler is home to 12,000+ employees and expanding rapidly. The inter-campus transfer path is well-established and well-traveled. For Intel professionals considering relocation, this is not a career restart — it's a same-company move to a lower-tax state.
- Oregon home prices have risen without the same Sun Belt job-market depth. Portland and suburban Oregon home prices have grown substantially. Unlike Phoenix, the underlying job market (outside of Intel, Nike, and a few major employers) is smaller and more narrow. Phoenix's job market depth — Intel, TSMC, PayPal, State Farm, Wells Fargo, Banner Health, Amazon distribution — provides more career optionality for Oregon transplants.
The Tax Comparison: Oregon vs Arizona
Oregon's income tax structure is graduated and reaches 9.9% for the highest earners. Unlike many graduated states where the top rate applies only to very high incomes, Oregon's effective rates hit most professional households at 6.75% or higher within the first $250,000 of income.
Oregon Income Tax Brackets (2026)
| Oregon Taxable Income | Oregon Tax Rate | Arizona Equivalent | Annual Rate Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0 – $18,400 | 4.75% | 2.5% flat | 2.25 percentage points |
| $18,401 – $250,000 | 6.75% | 2.5% flat | 4.25 percentage points |
| $250,001 – $400,000 | 8.75% | 2.5% flat | 6.25 percentage points |
| Over $400,000 | 9.9% | 2.5% flat | 7.4 percentage points |
| Arizona (all income) | 2.5% flat — no graduated brackets, no county income tax | ||
The key insight: Oregon's 6.75% bracket covers most of what working Oregonians actually earn. A household with $200,000 in taxable income effectively pays approximately 6.75% on most of it — compared to Arizona's 2.5% flat. The rate gap for the majority of Oregon households is approximately 4.25 percentage points, producing annual savings of $6,000–$15,000+ when moving to Arizona.
Annual Income Tax Savings: Oregon to Arizona
| Annual Income | Oregon Tax (approx.) | Arizona Tax (2.5%) | Annual Savings Moving to AZ |
|---|---|---|---|
| $100,000 | ~$6,750 | $2,500 | ~$4,250/year |
| $150,000 | ~$10,125 | $3,750 | ~$6,375/year |
| $200,000 | ~$13,500 | $5,000 | ~$8,500/year |
| $300,000 | ~$21,000 | $7,500 | ~$13,500/year |
| $500,000 | ~$39,000 | $12,500 | ~$18,500+/year |
Oregon's No Sales Tax: What You Give Up
Oregon is one of only five US states with no sales tax. This benefit is real — and Oregon residents who move to Arizona do lose it. Arizona charges a 5.6% state sales tax plus local additions that bring the effective rate to 8–9%+ in most Phoenix Metro jurisdictions.
For a typical household spending $50,000 annually on taxable goods and services, Arizona's ~8.5% sales tax adds approximately $4,250/year in costs that Oregon residents didn't pay. This partially offsets income tax savings — especially for lower-income households where income tax savings are smaller.
At $200,000+ income, Arizona income tax savings of $8,500–$18,500/year far exceed the $3,000–$5,000 sales tax addition for typical spending patterns. The net benefit grows sharply with income — making the Arizona move most financially compelling for Oregon's professional class.
Net Annual Financial Improvement: Oregon → Arizona
| Scenario | Income Tax Savings | Property Tax Savings | Sales Tax Added Cost | Net Annual Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Portland, $175K income, $650K home | +$7,438/yr | +$1,950/yr | -$3,000/yr est. | ~$6,000–$9,000/yr net |
| Portland tech worker, $300K income, $800K home | +$13,500/yr | +$2,400/yr | -$3,000/yr est. | ~$12,900/yr net |
| Intel Hillsboro, $200K income, $700K home | +$8,500/yr | +$2,100/yr | -$3,500/yr est. | ~$7,100/yr net |
Property Tax Comparison: Oregon vs Maricopa County
Oregon's property tax advantage over Arizona is modest — Oregon's effective rates are reasonable, and the gap with Maricopa County is smaller than the income tax differential. But it adds to the overall picture.
| County | Effective Property Tax Rate | On a $650,000 Home |
|---|---|---|
| Multnomah County (Portland) | 0.90–1.20% | $5,850–$7,800/year |
| Washington County (Beaverton/Hillsboro) | 0.80–1.00% | $5,200–$6,500/year |
| Lane County (Eugene) | 0.80–1.00% | $5,200–$6,500/year |
| Jackson County (Medford) | 0.70–0.90% | $4,550–$5,850/year |
| Maricopa County, AZ | ~0.60% | ~$3,900/year |
On a comparable $650,000 home, Oregon property taxes run $1,300–$3,900 more per year than Maricopa County. When combined with income tax savings and net of sales tax additions, the full financial picture for most Oregon transplants shows a meaningful annual improvement.
The Intel Connection: Hillsboro to Chandler
No Oregon-to-Phoenix migration analysis is complete without discussing Intel. Intel's presence in both states creates a unique and direct relocation path that tens of thousands of employees navigate:
Oregon's largest private employer. Over 20,000 employees. Located in Hillsboro, Washington County. The RA1, RA2, RA3, D1X, and Fab 10 campus complex is Intel's most significant US presence. Engineers here are among the highest-earning in Oregon — and among those most affected by Oregon's 6.75–9.9% income tax rates.
Over 12,000 AZ employees and growing with the Ocotillo campus expansion. Intel's Arizona presence is scaling rapidly as part of Intel's domestic manufacturing commitment. Employee transfers from Hillsboro to Chandler follow an established HR process. The Chandler campus is minutes from top-rated school districts and the Ocotillo master-planned community.
The Intel transfer math: An Intel engineer earning $200,000 in Hillsboro pays approximately $13,500/year in Oregon income tax. The same salary in Chandler, Arizona costs $5,000 in state income tax. The annual after-tax improvement of $8,500 compounds immediately upon residency change — no career disruption, same employer, same salary, lower taxes.
Oregon's Broader Tech-to-Phoenix Corridor
Intel is the most direct path, but Oregon's broader tech corridor feeds Phoenix's employment base across multiple companies. Nike's global headquarters in Beaverton, Adidas North America in Portland, and Precision Castparts (aviation and aerospace) employ thousands of engineers, marketers, and operations professionals with transferable skills that map well to Phoenix's growing manufacturing and corporate sector (TSMC Arizona, PayPal, Microchip Technology, ON Semiconductor).
Climate Comparison: Oregon vs Phoenix
The climate difference between Oregon and Phoenix is more dramatic than between almost any other pair of major American cities. Understanding both sides of this trade is essential for Oregon buyers considering the move.
| Category | Portland, Oregon | Phoenix, Arizona |
|---|---|---|
| Annual Precipitation | 36 inches/year | 8 inches/year |
| Rainy Days/Year | ~144 days | ~36 days |
| Sunny Days/Year | ~144 days | 299 days |
| Summer High (July avg.) | 80°F — green, beautiful | 108°F — hot, dry |
| Winter Low (Jan avg.) | 36°F — cold, gray | 44°F — mild, sunny |
| October–April Experience | Persistent overcast and rain | 60–80°F; sunny; peak outdoor season |
| June–September Experience | Beautiful — Oregon's best season | 100–115°F; morning activity; pool afternoons |
| Snowfall | Occasional; 4–6 in. average | Zero |
The Climate Trade: What Oregon Transplants Actually Report
Oregon transplants in Phoenix describe the climate adjustment more nuanced than the raw numbers suggest:
- The winter transformation is the biggest gain. Oregonians who move to Phoenix describe their first Phoenix January and February as almost disorienting — hiking on a 72°F Saturday while Portland is buried in gray rain. The mental health improvement from winter sunshine is consistently cited as the most underestimated benefit of the move.
- Phoenix summer requires behavioral adaptation, not endurance. The 110°F summer days are intense but manageable with adjustment: outdoor activity before 8am and after 7pm, pools and patios with misters, air-conditioned indoor afternoons. Most Oregon transplants describe the first summer as the hardest; the second as routine.
- Oregon summers are genuinely better. June through September in Oregon — particularly in the Willamette Valley and coast — is some of the most beautiful weather anywhere in America. Phoenix summers cannot match this. Oregon transplants in Phoenix consistently note this as the thing they miss most, and many plan annual summer trips back to Oregon to reconnect with the green.
- The Oregon coast is irreplaceable. Phoenix has lakes (Saguaro Lake, Lake Pleasant), the Salt River for tubing, and desert hiking that produces "ocean-like" horizon vistas. None of it is the Pacific Ocean. Year 1 transplants miss it acutely. By year 2–3, most have adapted — the desert has its own hold. But Oregonians should know the coast will be missed.
Oregon Origins → East Valley Destination Map
Oregon buyers arrive with distinct lifestyle preferences and geographic identities that map well to specific East Valley communities:
| Oregon Origin | Best East Valley Match | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Portland West Hills / Lake Oswego | Scottsdale DC Ranch or Chandler Ocotillo | Upscale suburb to upscale suburb; professional demographics align; luxury master-plan character in both |
| Pearl District / NW Portland | Old Town Scottsdale or Tempe | Urban character transplants who prioritize walkability, restaurants, and arts scene |
| Beaverton / Hillsboro (Intel corridor) | Chandler Price Road / Gilbert | Direct Intel-to-Intel transfer; tech worker family community with A+ schools and master-plan infrastructure |
| Lake Oswego | Morrison Ranch Gilbert or North Scottsdale | Upscale suburban prestige; A+ school access; established community character |
| Eugene | Mesa or Queen Creek | Value-focused; university-adjacent energy; space and newer construction |
| Bend | Cave Creek or Fountain Hills | Mountain-desert character; outdoor lifestyle as organizing principle; arts community; larger lots |
| Salem | East Mesa or Chandler | Value-oriented family-focused move; practical suburban character; good school access |
| Medford / Southern Oregon | Queen Creek or Gilbert Southeast | Rural-adjacent lifestyle; space; agricultural character; newer master plans |
East Valley Cities for Oregon Transplants
The primary landing spot for Intel Hillsboro transfers. Intel Chandler's Ocotillo campus is minutes from the Ocotillo master-planned community. Hamilton High School is A+ rated. The Price Road corridor between Chandler and Gilbert is the East Valley's tech employment hub — closest to Hillsboro's suburban-professional character with excellent schools and walkable village centers.
Best match for Beaverton, Lake Oswego, and planned-suburb Oregon buyers. Morrison Ranch's trail network, lakes, and community gathering spaces parallel Hillsboro and Beaverton's suburban infrastructure. A+ schools throughout. Power Ranch adds equestrian paths and community park access that appeals to Oregon's outdoor-oriented suburban families.
Top choice for Portland West Hills and Lake Oswego buyers. DC Ranch and Gainey Ranch offer the prestige community environment that Lake Oswego buyers expect. Old Town Scottsdale is the East Valley's most walkable neighborhood and best analog to Portland's Pearl District energy — restaurants, galleries, walkable streets.
Best choice for Pearl District, NW Portland, and SE Portland urban buyers. Light rail, walkable corridors, ASU energy, and a restaurant and arts scene that offers genuine city texture. Mill Avenue and the Town Lake area provide the walkable urban experience closest to Portland's more urban neighborhoods.
Best match for Bend buyers and outdoor-first Oregon transplants. Large lots, natural desert terrain, equestrian culture, proximity to Tonto National Forest. Cave Creek's low density, mountain-facing orientation, and arts community feel closest to what Bend buyers are seeking — without the Oregon winter. Artists, outdoor enthusiasts, and those wanting genuine desert character land here.
Best match for Bend and Central Oregon buyers who want views, community identity, and McDowell Mountain access. The world's tallest fountain, small-town social character, mountain backdrop, and desert hiking trails create a unique community personality. Oregon coast and mountain transplants who want both natural beauty and East Valley access find Fountain Hills compelling.
What Oregon Buyers Should Know Before Moving
- Visit in July or August, not just October. Phoenix in October is extraordinary. Phoenix in July reveals the full summer experience. If you make your purchase decision after visiting in October and arrive in July for your first full summer, the gap will feel larger than expected. Make the summer trip first — the market will still be there.
- You will pay sales tax now. Account for it. Oregon residents have not paid sales tax in their home state. Arizona's 8–9%+ combined rate on purchases is a real adjustment, particularly in the first year. Budget for it — it shows up in every transaction from groceries to cars to contractor services.
- Pool ownership is not optional — it's infrastructure. Oregon transplants sometimes view a pool as a luxury. Phoenix residents understand it as primary outdoor living space from June through September. If you buy a home without a pool, plan to build one. Budget $60,000–$100,000 for a pool in the first two years if the home doesn't have one.
- The Prescott and Flagstaff escape valve is real. Oregon transplants who struggle with the loss of green seasons and mountain recreation discover that Prescott (5,400 ft, 2 hours north) and Flagstaff (7,000 ft, 2 hours north) offer pine trees, cooler temperatures, and genuine mountain character. Many Phoenix residents from Oregon make regular trips. Arizona Snowbowl in Flagstaff has actual skiing. The Oregon outdoors will be missed — but Arizona has more than people expect.
- HOAs are common and actively enforced. Oregon's suburban culture has relatively relaxed HOA enforcement. Phoenix's master-planned communities have active HOA boards, architectural review committees, and real enforcement mechanisms. Read the CC&Rs carefully before purchasing in any master-planned community — restrictions on parking, landscaping, exterior modifications, and rental are common and enforced.
Frequently Asked Questions: Oregon to Phoenix
Ryan Moxley is a REALTOR® with My Home Group (ADRE SA643872000), specializing in relocation buyers across the Phoenix East Valley. He works with Oregon and Pacific Northwest buyers navigating the move to Arizona regularly. Contact Ryan at (480) 227-9143 or moxleysellsaz@gmail.com.