Farmers markets, Riverfront Trail, and Block 15 Brewery — all anchored by Oregon State University and a deeply educated community. Corvallis delivers big-city culture in a compact, walkable city where inventory is constrained by design and your equity is supported by 33,000 students who never stop needing housing.
Unlike most Oregon markets, Corvallis hasn't experienced dramatic swings. OSU's 33,000-student enrollment and a disciplined city planning approach create a floor that speculative markets don't have.
Inventory is up nearly 46% year-over-year — the most supply Corvallis buyers have seen in years. But sellers are still capturing 99.1 cents on every listed dollar, and the median sits at $571K. This is a market where buyers finally have options, but shouldn't expect desperation pricing. OSU doesn't stop enrolling, HP doesn't leave, and Samaritan doesn't downsize. The demand floor is institutional, not speculative.
Corvallis is compact — you can cross the whole city in fifteen minutes. But the neighborhoods have distinct characters shaped by proximity to OSU, the Willamette River, and the hills to the west.
The Farmers Market, Block 15 Brewery, and Riverfront Trail are all within easy reach. A mix of professionals, couples, and empty-nesters drawn to the energy of a college town without the noise of student housing. Close to OSU — close to everything.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002, College Hill contains 250+ homes built between 1916 and 1935. Six former OSU presidents lived here. Tree-lined streets, a deeply walkable character, and the kind of architectural detail that can't be replicated. The premium is real and earned.
Southtown runs along the Willamette and has the most eclectic, artsy character of any Corvallis neighborhood. It's the entry point for first-time buyers who want to be inside city limits without paying College Hill prices. Several distinct enclaves, each with a different feel.
Perched above the valley with panoramic views, Timberhill attracts families who want space, quiet, and access to Chip Ross Park and the Timberhill Athletic Club. Larger lots, a mix of newer construction and established homes, and a neighborhood feel that's decidedly residential rather than collegiate.
West of downtown, the city grades into a series of semi-rural communities with larger lots and more land between neighbors. The commute to campus and downtown is easy; the trade is that you'll need a car for most errands. Popular with buyers who want space without leaving Corvallis.
Ten minutes west on Highway 20, Philomath is technically a separate city but functions as Corvallis's western satellite. The fastest appreciation in the region last year. Larger lots, mountain views, access to coastal Highway 20, and the 7th-ranked school district in Oregon (Niche). Equity-rich buyers from Portland suburbs have found it.
College Hill's National Register designation affects what you can build and modify, but not what you can buy. The historic designation protects the streetscape; it doesn't freeze your equity. Properties here have historically traded at a premium to the broader Corvallis market, with buyers drawn by architectural character that can't be found in new construction at any price.
Corvallis's city limits have constrained supply for years. There are currently only two significant new construction opportunities in the immediate area — and one requires a 15-minute drive.
The only major new construction development inside Corvallis city limits. Holt Homes is building 3–5 bedroom homes ranging from 1,800 to 2,800 sq ft, with energy-efficient systems, smart-home features, tree-lined streets, and playgrounds. Near top-rated schools and minutes from downtown. Demand here has been pulling interest into adjacent NW Corvallis neighborhoods.
The lowest entry price for new construction accessible to Corvallis. Meadowlark is in Albany — a 15-minute drive via Highway 20 — and targets first-time buyers and young families who want OSU-area access without OSU-area pricing. Parks, trails, cul-de-sacs. Quick commute to campus. For buyers who can't stretch to Ponderosa Ridge, this is the honest alternative.
Albany (Linn County) median is $100K–$130K below Corvallis for comparable homes, with a 15-minute commute. OSU staff and HP employees increasingly look to Albany for space, value, and new construction that simply doesn't exist inside Corvallis city limits. If your lifestyle doesn't require walking distance to downtown Corvallis, Albany deserves a serious look.
Your lender quotes principal and interest. Here's the real number — with property taxes, insurance, utilities, and PMI. Assumptions: 6.5% rate, 30-year fixed, 10% down.
At 0.89%–0.95% effective rate, Benton County has the second-highest property taxes in Oregon. On a $567K median home, that's roughly $390–$410 per month in property tax alone — more than you'd pay in Salem, Eugene, or Medford for the same home value. This is a known cost of accessing the Corvallis market. Factor it early, not after.
Corvallis doesn't attract speculative buyers or equity refugees chasing a trend. The people who succeed here have institutional connections to the market — and long time horizons.
Oregon State employs thousands of faculty and staff with stable, well-compensated positions and long careers in the same city. The result is a homebuying cohort that buys once, holds long, and doesn't generate panic selling in down markets. If you're in this category, you're buying in the market that built itself around you.
HP's Corvallis campus has anchored the city's private-sector tech employment for decades. These buyers skew toward Brooklane, SW Country Club, and Timberhill — neighborhoods with larger lots and newer construction. Remote workers from Bay Area and Seattle increasingly identify Corvallis as the lifestyle-value trade they've been looking for.
Samaritan Health is one of the region's largest employers, with its main campus in Corvallis. Healthcare workers tend to stay — the profession is place-tied in a way that tech and academia sometimes aren't. This cohort drives steady demand across the mid-market and contributes to the low turnover rate that makes Corvallis inventory so constrained.
Corvallis draws retirees who want the cultural energy of a university town without the density and cost of Portland. The Farmers Market, Benton County parks system, OSU public lectures and performances, and a highly educated neighbor base make this one of Oregon's most compelling retirement destinations. Buyers coming from Bay Area or Seattle find the price-to-lifestyle ratio striking.
The top metros sending buyers to Corvallis, in order: Seattle, Eugene, Los Angeles, San Francisco. Remote work has unlocked demand from people who previously couldn't justify the commute. For sellers, this is a feature. For buyers competing with equity-rich transplants, it's worth knowing who you're competing with.
Cedar provides Corvallis market data, neighborhood breakdowns, and AI-assisted buyer guidance — from College Hill vs. Timberhill comparisons to true cost calculations. Fill out below and Cedar will follow up directly. Or call now: (971) 370-2997