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Gutter in Portland

Portland gutter is shaped by three forces that do not apply evenly across the rest of Oregon: the relentless moss and moisture cycle that defines the Willamette Valley, the Bureau of Development Services permit system with its reputation for deliberate timelines, and historic district review across neighborhoods like Ladd’s Addition, Irvington, and the Alphabet District. A Craftsman in Laurelhurst is not the same project as a 1990s ranch in Beaverton, and the bid reflects it.

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What makes Portland gutter replacement different

Portland sits inside the Willamette Valley on the west side of the Cascades, a marine climate that delivers something close to 150 wet days a year and mild winters that keep gutter decks damp for months at a stretch. The consequence for gutters is biological before it is structural. Moss establishes on north-facing slopes and under tree canopy within a few winters, traps moisture against aluminum granules, and lifts tabs from below. A composition gutter gutter that would last 22 years in Denver commonly fails here at 15 to 18 years, and the defining Portland gutter replacement conversation is not just about material — it is about the zinc strip, the copper wire, and the annual soft-wash cycle that will keep the new gutter from repeating the fate of the one coming off.

The second layer is permitting. Gutter replacement work inside the Portland city limits goes through the Bureau of Development Services (BDS), not Multnomah County, and BDS has its own Development Hub online portal, its own amended version of the Oregon Residential Specialty Code, and a well-earned reputation for timelines on complex work. Straight gutter replacement permits for single-family homes are issued relatively quickly online; the six-to-twelve-month horror stories homeowners hear from neighbors are almost always tied to full additions, ADU construction, or scope that triggers plan review. Knowing which bucket your project lands in is the single most useful thing a Portland owner can figure out before signing a contract.

The third layer is historic review. Portland has a long list of formally designated historic districts — the Alphabet Historic District in Nob Hill, Ladd’s Addition with its distinctive octagonal street plan, Irvington, Kenton, Lair Hill, Piedmont, and the Old Town Chinatown/Skidmore district — plus hundreds of individually listed resources scattered through the east side. Gutter work on any of those properties runs through the Portland Historic Landmarks Commission in addition to the BDS permit, and material, color, exposure, and edge detail are all reviewable.

BDS permits and the Multnomah County alternate path

Who reviews your gutter replacement depends on whether the house is inside the Portland city boundary. Inside, BDS. Outside, but in unincorporated Multnomah, Washington, or Clackamas counties, the county building department handles it.

For Portland single-family homes, BDS requires a gutter replacement permit whenever the work exposes the gutter sheathing or alters the envelope — which in practice means any full tear-off. Permits are submitted through the Development Hub online portal, simple single-family gutter replacement are generally issued without a wait, and the contractor’s CCB license is verified at the time of application. BDS targets a final inspection on gutter replacement jobs rather than closing on an affidavit alone, so owners should confirm the inspection is scheduled and passed before wiring the final draw to the contractor. Unclosed permits live on the property record and surface during sale.

BDS does take a long time on complex work. Six-to-twelve-month timelines that circulate on neighborhood forums are real, but they describe full residential additions, ADU construction, and projects that trigger structural plan review — not stand-alone gutter replacement. If your scope is only replacing the gutter in kind, the permit process is not the part of the project that slows you down. If the scope touches a dormer, adds solar-integrated gutter, or converts attic space to living area, budget accordingly and do not assume the calendar that fit a neighbor’s simple tear-off will fit yours.

Permit
Portland Bureau of Development Services (BDS)
  • Oregon CCB license verification
    BDS requires a current Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB) number on every residential gutter replacement application. Gutter falls under the specialty endorsement path in ORS Chapter 701. The state page covers the bond, insurance, and residential contractor endorsement details; at the city level, the BDS intake desk will simply reject an application without a valid CCB number.
  • Historic Landmarks Commission review
    Properties inside Alphabet, Ladd’s Addition, Irvington, Kenton, Lair Hill, Piedmont, or Skidmore/Old Town Chinatown — and any individually landmarked resource — require Historic Resource Review before BDS will issue or finalize the gutter replacement permit. Material, color, and profile are reviewable; Ladd’s Addition in particular is known for deliberate review of anything visible from the street.
  • ADU and tiny-house gutter scope
    Portland has been aggressive about legalizing accessory dwelling units, and a meaningful share of gutter work in the city now sits on an ADU or a converted detached structure rather than the main house. BDS treats the ADU gutter as its own permit scope, and low-slope sections common on modern ADUs often require a TPO or similar membrane rather than aluminum. Ventilation and flashing where the ADU meets the primary structure are the usual failure points.
  • Straight gutter replacement versus plan review queue
    BDS has a shorter path for simple single-family gutter replacement and a much longer one for scope that triggers plan review. The city publishes performance dashboards through the Development Hub; anecdotally, plan-review projects can sit weeks to months before first comment. Straight gutter replacement avoid this queue. Additions, dormer reconfigurations, and structural gutter alterations do not.

Typical gutter replacement cost in Portland

Portland is a mid-to-high labor cost metro, and prices reflect both the wage market and the predictable surprise of hidden decking damage once the old gutter comes off. A wet-climate tear-off very commonly exposes a few rotten sheets, failed fasteners, or moss damage that did not show from below.

Gutter sizeMaterialTypical rangeNote
1,900 sq ftAluminum architectural gutter$12,000–$19,000Typical Portland range at $6.30–$10.00 per square foot installed on a straightforward mid-pitch Craftsman; no decking replacement.
2,400 sq ftAluminum architectural gutter$18,000–$30,000Common east-side single-family band; mid-range covers modest decking repair and moss-resistant underlayment.
2,000 sq ftStanding-seam metal$28,000–$52,000Increasingly popular on Mt. Tabor and Alameda view properties where moss resistance and 40+ year service life justify the premium.
2,000 sq ftCedar shake restoration or replacement$26,000–$48,000Limited to Alameda, Laurelhurst, and similar pockets where cedar is the existing gutter or historic review favors it. Class B fire-rated treated shakes are the practical spec.
1,200 sq ft (ADU or low-slope dormer)TPO membrane$9,000–$16,000Standard for modern flat-gutter ADU additions and low-slope dormer sections on historic homes where aluminum will not drain.
Hidden-cost adderDecking, rot repair, ventilation upgrade$3,500–$14,000Familiar Portland surprise; wet-climate decking damage is routine rather than exceptional.

Ranges compiled from Portland-area contractor 2024–2025 pricing references and Oregon CCB filings. Directional only — a real bid requires a site visit and CCB-verified contractor.

Estimate your Portland gutter

Uses the statewide Oregon calculator tuned to local code requirements. Directional — not a binding quote. Your actual bid depends on access, decking, tear-off layers, and the specific contractor.

Adjust size, material, and the east-of-Cascades fire-retrofit toggle below. The Oregon calculator uses national base rates and applies a material uplift when the fire-retrofit toggle is on — reflecting Class A gutter construction, ember-resistant vent screens, and non-combustible gutters that eastern-Oregon wildfire-scored ZIPs increasingly require. For Willamette Valley and coastal jobs, add $1,000–$3,000 for moss mitigation scope; for Cascade mountain jurisdictions add $800–$2,500 for ice-barrier and snow-load detailing.

40500

Class A fire-rated gutter assembly, 1/8-inch ember-resistant vent screens on every attic vent, and non-combustible gutters. Increasingly required in Deschutes, Jackson, Klamath, and Lake counties under 2023 ORSC Section R327 amendments and carrier underwriting — a documented Class A assembly is what moves a nonrenewed homeowner back into the standard market.

Estimated Oregon range
$940 – $1,980
  • Materials$652 – $1,468
  • Labor$192 – $384
  • Permits & disposal$96 – $128

Includes Oregon code adders: Moss pretreatment + ridge strip (Western Oregon standard scope)

Get actual bids →

Directional estimate. Does not include Cascade snow-load uplift, decking replacement, or chimney flashing beyond the headline gutter scope. Submit your zip above for real contractor bids from CCB-licensed Oregon gutter installers.

Neighborhood patterns that shape the bid

Portland housing stock varies sharply by district. The gutter profile, the access, and the review layer all change from one side of the river to the other.

  • Alphabet District and Nob Hill (NW 23rd)
    Dense cluster of 1890s–1920s Victorians, Foursquares, and early Craftsmans inside the Alphabet Historic District. Historic Resource Review applies to visible gutter changes, and the tight lots make dumpster and lift access a real cost factor. Cedar shake was original on many; most have long since been converted to composition gutter.
  • Ladd’s Addition
    The distinctive octagonal street plan in Southeast is one of Portland’s most closely reviewed historic districts. Any gutter change visible from the street runs through Historic Resource Review, and turnaround on Ladd’s applications is a known schedule risk. Owners planning a summer tear-off often start the review conversation the previous fall.
  • Irvington
    Large concentration of 1900s–1930s Craftsman bungalows and Foursquares inside the Irvington Historic District on the near east side. Low-pitch gables, wide eaves, and exposed rafter tails dominate. Composition gutter is the norm; cedar shake replacement is reviewable. Moss pressure is heavy because of the mature tree canopy.
  • Laurelhurst and Alameda
    Established east-side neighborhoods where cedar shake still survives on a meaningful share of homes. Replacement-in-kind with Class B treated shakes is available but expensive; most owners switch to a premium architectural composition or standing-seam metal at gutter replacement time. Steep pitches and dormer-heavy rooflines add labor hours.
  • Sellwood and Eastmoreland
    Mid-century bungalows and 1920s homes on smaller lots. Sellwood has pockets of older, quirkier rooflines; Eastmoreland leans larger and more uniform. Moss pressure is severe under the heavy Douglas fir canopy, and zinc ridge strips are essentially standard practice on any new install.
  • Mt. Tabor
    Volcanic cinder cone with steep streets and significant west-wind exposure at elevation. Modern metal gutters have become common here in part because views and slope make the long service life worth the premium, and in part because moss pressure at elevation is still meaningful despite better sun exposure than the lower flats.
  • St. Johns and Kenton
    North Portland working-class neighborhoods with a mix of smaller Craftsmans and mid-century stock. Kenton carries historic-district protections around its core; St. Johns is largely outside formal review. Both have seen rapid ADU permitting, so a meaningful share of gutter work is on secondary structures rather than the primary house.

Storms Portland gutters should be ready for

Portland peril exposure is ice, wind, and the occasional heat event — not hail or tornadoes. What actually happens here:

  • 2024
    January 2024 ice storm
    A multi-day ice storm in mid-January coated trees and power lines across the metro, snapping limbs onto gutters and leaving over 150,000 Portland General Electric customers without power at the peak. Gutter damage claims clustered around tree strikes and ice-dam water intrusion at eaves; several deaths were reported regionally.
  • 2021
    June 2021 Heat Dome
    A historic atmospheric ridge drove Portland to a record 116°F on June 28, 2021. Dark-colored aluminum gutter surfaces reached damaging substrate temperatures, and the months that followed produced a noticeable uptick in premature thermal blistering and granule-loss claims on gutters already past mid-life. The event permanently shifted local thinking about attic ventilation and reflective gutter options.
  • 2021
    February 2021 ice storm
    A prolonged ice event across the Willamette Valley brought down trees across the region and left parts of the metro without power for more than a week. Tree-strike damage to gutters and skylights was the dominant claim pattern, particularly in neighborhoods like Eastmoreland and Laurelhurst with heavy tree canopy.
  • 2008
    December 2008 Arctic blast
    Nearly two weeks of persistent snow and ice in late December stressed low-slope gutters across the metro with sustained snow load and produced widespread ice-dam damage on older homes without modern ice-and-water shield underlayment. Insurance and gutter backlogs stretched into the following spring.
  • 2006
    December 2006 Hanukkah Eve windstorm
    The benchmark regional wind event of the 2000s struck December 14–15, 2006, with gusts near 70 mph across the Portland metro and extensive tree-fall damage to gutters, skylights, and chimneys. Older housing stock without modern ridge and rake nailing patterns took disproportionate damage.

Portland gutter FAQ

  • Do I need a BDS permit to gutter replacement my Portland house?
    Yes, in almost all cases. If the work exposes the gutter sheathing — which any full tear-off does — the Bureau of Development Services requires a gutter replacement permit submitted through the Development Hub. Simple single-family gutter replacement are issued quickly online, the contractor’s CCB number is verified at application, and a BDS inspector signs off on the finished work before the permit can be closed. Leaving a permit open stays visible on the property record and can complicate a future sale or refinance.
  • How much does moss treatment actually add to a Portland gutter replacement?
    Moss kill and removal during tear-off is typically bundled into the bid. What matters over the life of the gutter is the preventive plan. Most Portland contractors install a zinc ridge strip or run copper wire at install, and recommend a professional soft-wash and biocide treatment every 12 to 24 months. Budget roughly $275–$550 per treatment depending on pitch and access, and plan on treating at least every other year. Willamette Valley moss growth is among the most aggressive in the country, and skipping the cycle is the single most common reason Portland aluminum gutters fail at 15–18 years instead of the 22–25 years the gutter warranty implies.
  • How long does BDS actually take on a gutter replacement?
    For a straight single-family gutter replacement with no scope change beyond the gutter itself, the permit is issued online quickly — often within a few business days — and a final inspection is scheduled once the work is done. The BDS timelines Portlanders complain about, the six-to-twelve-month horror stories, apply to full residential additions, ADU construction, and anything that triggers structural plan review. Stand-alone gutter replacement do not sit in that queue. If the project adds a dormer, reconfigures the gutter structure, or integrates solar, expect the longer path.
  • My house is in Ladd’s Addition — what do I need to know?
    Ladd’s Addition is a designated historic district and anything visible from the street — gutter material, gutter color, trim color, visible flashing — is reviewable through Historic Resource Review before BDS will issue a permit. The review itself is deliberate, and summer-window projects typically need to be in review by the previous fall to keep the schedule. Replacement-in-kind with a period-appropriate composition profile is usually approvable; a stark color change or a swap from cedar to metal usually is not. The same review posture applies in Alphabet, Irvington, Kenton, Lair Hill, Piedmont, and Skidmore/Old Town Chinatown.
  • I have cedar shake now — what are my real options?
    Three practical paths. Replace in kind with Class B fire-rated treated cedar shakes, which preserves the look but remains maintenance-heavy in Portland moisture and currently runs $26,000 to $48,000 on a 2,000-square-foot gutter. Switch to a premium architectural composition gutter that mimics a shake shadow line, which is the most common choice and brings the gutter in line with modern insurance underwriting. Or step up to standing-seam metal or synthetic slate, which carry long service lives and essentially eliminate the moss problem. If the property is in a historic district, the Historic Landmarks Commission will weigh in on which of these is approvable.
  • When is the right weather window to tear off a gutter in Portland?
    May through October is the reliable dry stretch. July and August are the prime window — contractors are booked out heavily, but the chance of a tear-off getting caught by weather is lowest. Responsible contractors will tear off only what they can dry-in the same day, and modern synthetic underlayments are rated for extended exposure, so a shoulder-season project in April or October is not inherently risky. What you do not want is a November through February tear-off unless the scope is an emergency repair; even competent crews fight weather windows that short.
  • Is hail a real concern in Portland?
    Rarely, compared with Denver or Dallas. Portland occasionally sees small hail during convective spring storms, and genuine damaging hail is uncommon enough that impact-resistant Class 4 gutters do not move the insurance-discount needle here the way they do east of the Rockies. The destructive forces that matter in Portland are ice loading, tree strikes during wind events, moss-driven gutter failure, and the thermal stress of heat-dome events. Spec and underlayment choices should be made for those modes, not for hail.
  • Does BDS still have jurisdiction if my house is just outside Portland?
    No. BDS only reviews work inside the City of Portland boundary. If the property is in unincorporated Multnomah, Washington, or Clackamas County, the permit goes through the respective county building department. Incorporated suburbs like Beaverton, Hillsboro, Lake Oswego, Gresham, and Tigard run their own building departments. Oregon CCB licensing applies statewide regardless of which jurisdiction handles the permit, so the contractor vetting step is the same.

For the Oregon-wide framework — CCB contractor licensing, ORS 701 residential contractor endorsement, bond and insurance requirements, statewide Oregon Residential Specialty Code baseline, and the Willamette Valley seismic picture — see the Oregon gutter guide.

Read the Oregon gutter guide

Sources

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