The way rats live in Portland is not the way they live in Bend.
Oregon spans five distinct climate zones — coastal rainforest, the Willamette Valley floor, Cascade foothills, the high desert, and the Rogue Valley. Each one produces a different rodent pressure pattern, and each one calls for a different response. We catalogue all of it: pressure timelines, neighborhood notes, species behavior, and the local operators we trust in each city.
Talk to a guide · (541) 422-4462The cities we cover, and what to expect there.
Six Oregon cities are live today, with eight more in queue. Each one carries the same field structure: a long-form read on how rodents pressure that city specifically, a seasonal timeline, the neighborhoods we hear from most, a vetted directory of the top three local operators, and plainly-answered questions from residents. See the full coverage map →
Portland
POP. 635KNorway rats own the combined sewer system; roof rats are climbing east. Year-round pressure, two seasonal peaks.
Eugene
POP. 178KUniversity district churn, riparian-zone roof rats along the Willamette, and aggressive fall house-mouse incursions.
Corvallis
POP. 60KFarmland edges, OSU rentals, and basement crawl spaces — a mixed-pressure city with sharp October ramps.
Bend
POP. 105KDeer mice and pack rats lead here. Cold-snap incursions from October onward; lava-rock voids complicate exclusion.
Salem
POP. 178KA government-town daytime population plus older housing stock east of the river creates a steady Norway-rat baseline.
Albany
POP. 58KSurrounded by grass-seed fields; field-mouse pressure spikes after late-summer harvests and stubble burning.
MORE CITIES ON THE WAY — SEE THE FULL LIST.
One state, five climates, one network of local operators.
The reason we built this site is simple: most rodent guides on the internet are written for nowhere in particular. Oregon needs better than that.
Oregon's climate zones each produce a different rodent pressure pattern, and the right response varies sharply between them. A Portland Norway-rat sewer-line strategy is not the right answer for Bend's deer mice or Medford's year-round roof rats. A Willamette Valley field-mouse incursion in November behaves nothing like an attic colony along the coast.
Rodent Control Oregon is a publisher and directory. We help people understand their rodent issues and get connected with the correct solution.
Species behavior is regional
Norway rats dominate dense urban sewers; roof rats follow fruit trees and warm soffits; deer mice prefer cold-season high-desert burrows. We map each.
Building stock shapes the response
Pre-1950 Portland bungalows leak air at the rim joist. Bend's volcanic-rock crawl spaces hide nest networks. The fix is rarely a bait station.
Seasons run on different clocks
Coastal pressure is flat year-round. The valley peaks Oct–Dec. The high desert ramps with first snow. We chart it city by city.
The directory is vetted, not paid
Every operator we list is one we would call ourselves. No paid placements, no national chains, no number-selling. Just the top three in each city.
Field-observed, updated quarterly
Pressure timelines, species ranges, and city pages are refreshed every season from operator reports and walk-throughs. Last update: Spring 2026.
From the Learning Center.
Long-form pieces on species behavior, building science, and what to do before the operator arrives. Updated quarterly.
Roof Rats in Oregon: the slow eastward march from the Rogue Valley to the Willamette.
For most of the 20th century, Rattus rattus was a southern-Oregon problem. Mild winters, warming attics, and a steady supply of urban fruit trees have changed that. A field history with maps, sighting data, and what it means for homeowners north of Eugene.
Norway rats and the Portland sewer line
Why every old Portland block has a Norway rat colony — and why the city's combined sewer makes them so hard to displace.
The house mouse (Mus musculus): the species you actually have
Oregon has plenty of native mice. The one in your kitchen, almost without exception, is not one of them — and the cleanup risk is different.
Pack rats (Neotoma cinerea): the magpie of rodents
The bushy-tailed woodrat east of the Cascades — the trading habit, the midden problem, and the wiring-harness damage that comes with both.
Active infestation, or just trying to confirm what you heard last night?
One call routes you to the verified operator nearest you. We don't sell your number. We don't run hold music. If we can't help, we'll tell you who can.