Oregon runs the most extensive weight-distance tax program in the United States. Instead of collecting fuel tax on diesel at the pump, Oregon taxes heavy commercial vehicles on miles traveled on Oregon highways, scaled by declared gross vehicle weight. The program is administered by the Oregon Department of Transportation’s Motor Carrier Transportation Division, and it requires the most involved setup of any state weight-distance program — including a surety bond and monthly reporting.
Who Owes the Weight-Mile Tax
Oregon’s Weight-Mile Tax applies to motor vehicles with a combined gross vehicle weight of 26,000 lbs or more operating on Oregon public highways. Both for-hire and private carriers are covered, and the threshold applies to interstate and intrastate operations alike. Vehicles below the threshold or operating exclusively on non-public roads are not subject to the tax.
Account Setup: Bond and Process Agent
Setting up an Oregon Weight-Mile account involves more than filling out a form. The carrier has to:
- Open a Motor Carrier account with ODOT
- Post a surety bond (or an acceptable alternative security) in an amount set by ODOT based on the fleet and expected mileage
- Designate a process agent located in Oregon
- Declare operating weight classes for each vehicle in the fleet
Bond amounts are set by ODOT and vary with fleet size and expected exposure. Current bond requirements should be verified directly with ODOT Motor Carrier Transportation Division before filing — the figures are not static.
Monthly Returns
Oregon’s return cadence is the most aggressive of any state weight-distance program: monthly, not quarterly. The carrier reports total Oregon miles for the month multiplied by the applicable per-mile rate for the vehicle’s declared weight. Filings are submitted through ODOT’s online Trucking Online system.
The monthly cadence means compliance drift is caught faster — a missed filing surfaces in 30 days rather than 90. It also means the administrative overhead is roughly 3x that of a quarterly state for any carrier self-filing.
The Rate Table
Oregon’s per-mile rate rises with declared gross vehicle weight, in tiered steps. ODOT publishes a rate table annually, and carriers should file against the rate in effect for the reporting month. Rate changes do happen between years; carrying a prior-year rate forward into the current year’s returns produces filings that will be corrected by audit.
Trip Permit Alternative
For a single crossing without an account, a 72-hour Oregon trip permit is the right tool. The full Weight-Mile account is appropriate for carriers running Oregon regularly; it does not make sense for an occasional one-off trip. See the trip permit vs annual permit guide for the break-even math.
Where Oregon Sits in the State-Permit Map
Oregon’s monthly cadence stands apart from NY HUT (quarterly), KYU (quarterly), and NM WDT (quarterly), and matches Connecticut HUF. Background on how all these programs relate is in the state trucking permit pillar guide; Oregon is also separate from IFTA fuel-tax obligations even though it taxes the same vehicles.
Why Carriers Outsource Oregon
Between the bond requirement, the monthly return schedule, and the rate-table detail, Oregon is the state carriers are most likely to outsource to a professional filing service. The math usually works: a flat $299 setup fee plus predictable monthly filings beats paying a dispatcher to cycle through Trucking Online every 30 days and to babysit the bond documentation.