Inventory up 43% year-over-year. Prices softening. Days on market stretching. Albany is giving buyers something rare in Oregon real estate: time to think, room to negotiate, and $100K in savings over Corvallis fifteen minutes away. The window is open. The question is whether you walk through it.
Albany is not a consolation prize. It's a strategic choice — the city where Willamette Valley access, Corvallis proximity, and I-5 convenience converge at the lowest price point in the region.
Buyers now have 205–321 active listings to choose from — a dramatic shift from the sub-100 inventory of prior years. More selection means leverage. More days on market means time.
Corvallis median: $550K. Albany median: $425K. Same OSU commute, same Samaritan Health campuses, same regional lifestyle — at a gap that funds 6 years of college tuition.
Certain Albany-area properties qualify for USDA Rural Development loans — zero down payment, below-market rates. Combined with Oregon Bond Program, first-time buyers have real tools here.
Average homes in Albany now sit 55–99 days before going under contract — up from 30-something a year ago. Sellers haven't panicked yet (they're still getting 98.7–99% of asking), but the dynamic has shifted. This is the moment between a seller's market and a buyer's market where patient buyers with pre-approval in hand have real negotiating room. That window won't stay open indefinitely.
Two data sources tell slightly different stories — Zillow shows a slight gain, Redfin shows a decline from peak. Both agree on the direction: inventory is up, days on market are rising, and buyers have more leverage than they've had in years.
Albany covers more ground than it looks on a map. The neighborhoods have meaningfully different characters — and meaningfully different price points. Here's where each one sits and who it's right for.
The largest inventory and one of Albany's most active areas. South Albany sits near I-5 for quick access to Salem (25 minutes) and Corvallis (15 minutes), making it a commuter favorite. Mix of established and newer homes on generous lots. Growing area with a suburban feel that families consistently choose for the combination of space and connectivity.
Albany's most desirable residential area sits across the Willamette River — and it shows in the price. Newer subdivisions, strong schools (North Albany Elementary is one of the district's best), and a 15-minute commute to downtown Corvallis via Highway 20. If you're buying Albany for Corvallis access, North Albany puts that access at its most direct. It's also where Corvallis buyers who finally gave up on Benton County land.
A solid mid-range option for first-time buyers who want more home for their dollar. East Albany sits closer to the I-5 corridor, which means slightly more traffic noise on some streets — but also faster commutes south. More affordable than North or South Albany, with a mix of older established homes and some newer builds. The $416K median lands squarely in the sweet spot for buyers who have pre-approval in the $380K–$450K range.
The most affordable in-city option — and the one that actually moves fastest despite lower prices. Central Albany attracts investors, budget-conscious buyers, and anyone hunting for a fixer with character. The older historic stock includes some genuinely beautiful homes in the Monteith Historic District (median $432K) that you simply cannot replicate with new construction. If you're looking at $340K–$400K, this is where your search should start.
Hayden Homes' Meadowlark ($339,990–$519,990) offers the lowest-priced new construction near Corvallis, with parks, trails, and a direct Highway 20 commute to OSU. Lennar's Riverwood Crossing & Curry Meadows ($374,000–$538,000) brings modern finishes at 15–25% below central Corvallis pricing. Both are 15 minutes from campus. For buyers who want new over used, Albany is where it pencils.
Albany's price points work with Oregon's best assistance programs. The combination of lower home prices and multiple program options makes first-time homeownership achievable for households that have been locked out of Portland and Corvallis.
FHA financing is built for buyers who haven't accumulated a large down payment. At Albany's $425K median, a 3.5% down payment is $14,875 — far more manageable than the conventional 20% ($85,000) that shuts out most first-time buyers. FHA rates are typically competitive, and the lower credit score threshold opens the door for buyers rebuilding or establishing credit history.
The USDA loan program offers 100% financing — no down payment — for eligible properties in rural and semi-rural areas. Some Albany-area properties in Linn County qualify, particularly on the outer edges of town and in the Lebanon corridor (15 minutes south). Income limits apply, but for qualifying buyers in qualifying properties, this is the single most powerful financing tool in Oregon.
Oregon Housing and Community Services administers the Oregon Bond Residential Loan Program, which provides below-market interest rates for first-time buyers (defined as no ownership in the past 3 years). Income and purchase price limits apply. Albany properties generally fall well within those limits. Down payment assistance is available as a second mortgage — for many buyers, this is the program that bridges the gap between renting and owning.
Albany's price range — $340K–$520K — sits in the sweet spot for Oregon's assistance programs. Portland homes often exceed program purchase price caps. Corvallis homes frequently do too. Albany hits the target almost perfectly. A buyer using Oregon Bond rates plus down payment assistance in a USDA-eligible area outside Albany proper could enter homeownership with as little as closing costs out of pocket. That scenario doesn't exist in most Oregon markets.
Inventory data tells the real story of a market's power balance. In Albany, that story has flipped decisively in buyers' favor — more listings, more days, more room to negotiate.
Albany rents fell 14.5% year-over-year — one of the sharpest rent declines of any Oregon city. This matters to buyers in two ways: first, it signals a real supply surplus in the local market. Second, investors who bought for cash flow are reassessing, and some of that listing inventory is investor-owned property coming to market. For owner-occupant buyers, this is an opportunity. For buyers who plan to rent the property later, run conservative rental income projections.
Your lender quotes principal and interest. Here's the real monthly number — with property taxes, insurance, utilities, and PMI included. Assumptions: 6.5% rate, 30-year fixed, 10% down.
At Linn County's 0.82% effective property tax rate and $812/year average insurance, Albany sits well below Benton County (Corvallis at 0.89–0.95%) and Multnomah County (Portland at 0.98%). Monthly utilities run about $311 — more than Salem's exceptional $253 but far below Portland's $422. The full picture: Albany's $350K home costs $2,805/month total. Portland's equivalent (if you could find one) runs $2,992/month. You're saving $187/month without giving up the I-5 corridor or Willamette Valley access. Over 10 years: $22,440.
Albany is a lower-risk Oregon market — no wildfire exposure, reasonable taxes, stable employment anchors. But three factors deserve real attention before you sign.
Albany sits in the Willamette Valley, and portions of the city are in documented flood zones near the river. The 1996 flood displaced 30,000 Oregonians across the valley — this is not a theoretical risk. NFIP flood insurance in Corvallis (the nearest comparable market) averages $1,314/year. Always check FEMA's flood map at msc.fema.gov for any Albany property near low-lying areas. Over 27% of Oregon flood claims come from outside the officially designated 100-year floodplain.
Full flood risk guide →Albany rents fell 14.5% year-over-year — the sharpest drop of any Willamette Valley market. If you're buying with plans to rent the property later, or as an investment, do not underwrite with today's rent levels as your floor. The market is absorbing a significant supply increase; project conservatively. Owner-occupants are insulated from this — but investors need to stress-test their numbers at current rents, not 2023 rents.
Investment considerations →The Cascadia Subduction Zone carries a 37% probability of a M7.1+ earthquake in the next 50 years. Albany faces strong but survivable shaking — no tsunami risk from this location. The real consequence is infrastructure: water, sewer, and roads could be offline for weeks to months after a major event. Standard homeowner's policies don't cover earthquakes. Only about 20% of Oregonians carry earthquake insurance, and most have never priced it.
Full earthquake risk guide →Cedar is building the most honest, data-driven buyer's resource in Oregon. Join the waitlist and we'll send you Albany market updates, neighborhood breakdowns, and early access to our AI buyer's agent — including program matching for FHA, USDA, and Oregon Bond.
Coming Soon