Oregon produced 62,652 business applications in 2025, up 4.7% from 2024 and 59.7% from the pre-pandemic 2019 baseline. The page shows the latest employer-likely application signal, county concentration after adjusting for population, private-sector labor growth, SBA lending, unincorporated receipts, bankruptcy filings, and federal contract demand.
Public source files covering Oregon business formation, labor, lending, proprietor income, bankruptcy, and federal contracting.
The topline combines new filing volume, employer-likely application quality, county concentration, labor-market structure, lending, and business stress signals.
Oregon logged 62,652 business applications in 2025, up 4.7% from 2024 and 59.7% from the pre-pandemic 2019 baseline.
Through May 2026, total applications were down 3.8% from the same months in 2025; high-propensity applications were up 2.8%.
Multnomah filed 16,110 applications in 2025, the largest county total in Oregon. Multnomah also led the high-volume counties after adjusting for population.
Professional services added the most private-sector establishments since 2019. Health care and social assistance added the most private-sector jobs.
SBA 7(a) and 504 approvals to Oregon businesses reached $611.0M in FY2025 across 1,303 loans, led by retail trade, accommodation and food services, construction, health care and social assistance, and manufacturing.
Business bankruptcy cases tied to Oregon counties rose from 225 to 280 in the 12-month period ending March 31, 2026.
Oregon business applications reached 62,652 in 2025, up 4.7% from 2024. Through May 2026, applications were running down 3.8% from the same months in 2025.
The 2019 comparison uses the last full pre-pandemic year. The shutdown period and the business churn that followed reshaped EIN filing patterns; high-propensity applications totaled 8,397 through May 2026, up 2.8% from Jan-May 2025. Projected business formations within eight quarters rose 6.8% over the same period.
Metric note: Census BFS counts applications for employer identification numbers. Applications are early filings; confirmed operating-business counts arrive later.
Multnomah is the largest application market by raw volume. Among the high-volume counties shown below, Multnomah stands out most after adjusting for population.
The chart uses 2025 Census BFS applications divided by Census Vintage 2025 resident population estimates. Multnomah leads both the raw filing count and the population-adjusted rate among the high-volume counties shown below.
Metric note: Census BFS counts EIN applications. The denominator is 2025 resident population, not existing businesses, so this is a scale adjustment rather than a startup conversion rate.
| County | 2025 applications | Change vs 2024 | Change vs 2019 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multnomah | 16,110 | +22.9% | +65.9% |
| Washington | 8,868 | +1.0% | +54.0% |
| Clackamas | 6,338 | +1.7% | +57.0% |
| Lane | 4,448 | +5.1% | +56.9% |
| Marion | 4,425 | -25.7% | +52.9% |
| Deschutes | 4,148 | +11.4% | +49.7% |
| Jackson | 3,471 | +11.1% | +57.3% |
| Linn | 1,498 | +7.4% | +79.4% |
| Yamhill | 1,292 | -17.8% | +53.6% |
| Douglas | 1,253 | +7.3% | +66.6% |
| Josephine | 1,189 | +6.7% | +37.5% |
| Polk | 1,052 | +5.0% | +80.4% |
In 2024, Oregon had 180,622 private-sector establishments and 1,701,612 private-sector jobs in the QCEW annual file. Establishments changed 18.1% from 2019 to 2024; jobs changed 1.4%.
Professional services added 9,484 establishments from 2019 to 2024. Health care and social assistance added 36,524 jobs over the same period.
QCEW tracks employer establishments. It is the recurring source here for jobs, wages, payroll, and local industry structure.
| Industry | 2024 establishments | Change vs 2019 | 2024 jobs | Change vs 2019 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Professional services | 26,628 | +9,484 (+55.3%) | 110,366 | +10,604 (+10.6%) |
| Health care and social assistance | 23,366 | +9,423 (+67.6%) | 300,603 | +36,524 (+13.8%) |
| Construction | 18,009 | +3,383 (+23.1%) | 116,080 | +7,209 (+6.6%) |
| Other services | 16,504 | -8,964 (-35.2%) | 68,964 | -9,459 (-12.1%) |
| Accommodation and food services | 13,174 | +1,138 (+9.5%) | 178,123 | -7,395 (-4.0%) |
| Administrative services | 9,992 | +2,325 (+30.3%) | 100,126 | -3,314 (-3.2%) |
| Wholesale trade | 9,513 | +663 (+7.5%) | 77,560 | +1,308 (+1.7%) |
| Information | 7,758 | +3,623 (+87.6%) | 36,110 | +1,057 (+3.0%) |
| Finance and insurance | 7,757 | +1,153 (+17.5%) | 52,795 | -3,716 (-6.6%) |
| Real estate and rental | 7,377 | +791 (+12.0%) | 29,164 | +250 (+0.9%) |
SBA 7(a) and 504 approvals to Oregon businesses totaled $611.0M in FY2025 across 1,303 loans. The SBA files report 10,815 jobs supported for those approvals.
Retail trade drew $119.5M in FY2025 SBA approvals. accommodation and food services, construction, health care and social assistance, and manufacturing also ranked among the top capital destinations.
SBA fiscal year 2025 ran from Oct. 1, 2024, through Sept. 30, 2025. The source package was current as of April 28, 2026.
| Sector | FY2025 loans | FY2025 approvals | SBA jobs supported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retail trade | 148 | $119.5M | 1,152 |
| Accommodation and food services | 153 | $91.7M | 1,927 |
| Construction | 224 | $71.4M | 1,670 |
| Health care and social assistance | 123 | $64.1M | 1,658 |
| Manufacturing | 87 | $56.8M | 657 |
| Professional services | 127 | $44.5M | 870 |
| Other services | 128 | $39.0M | 683 |
| Transportation and warehousing | 50 | $19.4M | 382 |
| Arts and entertainment | 46 | $19.3M | 252 |
| Real estate and rental | 33 | $19.1M | 137 |
| County | FY2025 loans | FY2025 approvals | SBA jobs supported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multnomah | 257 | $151.3M | 2,737 |
| Washington | 168 | $72.0M | 1,550 |
| Lane | 109 | $61.0M | 963 |
| Clackamas | 127 | $59.6M | 986 |
| Marion | 99 | $50.8M | 765 |
| Jackson | 94 | $37.3M | 596 |
| Deschutes | 96 | $36.2M | 646 |
| Yamhill | 33 | $22.0M | 529 |
| Umatilla | 21 | $15.3M | 107 |
| Clatsop | 26 | $11.5M | 178 |
IRS SOI data show 354,073 Oregon Schedules C and partnership returns/forms in Tax Year 2023. Those businesses reported $62.7B in gross receipts and $6.3B in the combined income/profit measure.
Oregon had 306,928 nonfarm sole-proprietor Schedules C in Tax Year 2023, with $19.8B in gross receipts and $3.5B in net profit.
Oregon partnerships filed 47,145 Forms 1065 in Tax Year 2023 and reported $43.0B in gross receipts.
| County | Returns/forms | Gross receipts | Combined income/profit metric |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multnomah | 82,155 | $13.3B | $1.1B |
| Washington | 49,043 | $10.8B | $285.0M |
| Clackamas | 38,140 | $10.8B | $1.1B |
| Lane | 29,397 | $4.4B | $787.3M |
| Deschutes | 24,482 | $4.8B | $711.3M |
| Marion | 22,663 | $3.8B | $561.3M |
| Jackson | 19,610 | $2.9B | $369.3M |
| Linn | 8,163 | $1.5B | $164.2M |
| Yamhill | 8,105 | $1.3B | $80.2M |
| Benton | 7,495 | $642.7M | $120.6M |
U.S. Courts F-5A shows 280 business bankruptcy cases tied to Oregon counties in the 12 months ending March 31, 2026, rose from 225 in the prior 12-month period. Chapter 11 cases totaled 58.
Multnomah had the largest business-bankruptcy count in the latest F-5A table. County bankruptcy rows can move when related business cases are filed in the same venue, so this table works best as a lead for follow-up reporting.
Definition: U.S. Courts classifies debt as business when the debtor is a corporation or partnership, or when business-related debt predominates.
| County | Business cases, 12 months ending Mar. 31, 2026 | Change vs prior 12 months | Chapter 11 cases | All bankruptcy cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multnomah | 67 | +9 | 13 | 1,473 |
| Washington | 67 | +23 | 21 | 1,077 |
| Clackamas | 26 | -4 | 5 | 786 |
| Lane | 20 | +4 | 3 | 872 |
| Jackson | 19 | +10 | 3 | 544 |
| Marion | 17 | +10 | 2 | 854 |
| Deschutes | 14 | -2 | 1 | 430 |
| Yamhill | 6 | +3 | 1 | 224 |
| Polk | 4 | +0 | 2 | 189 |
| Jefferson | 4 | +4 | 0 | 63 |
The 2026 Fed Small Business Credit Survey appendix reported that 94% of U.S. employer firms faced a financial challenge in 2025, 38% applied for financing, and 52% of applicants were fully approved.
USAspending reports $2.5B in FY2025 federal procurement obligations to recipients located in Oregon. The filter covers procurement awards to OR recipients across award type codes A, B, C, and D.
| NAICS | Federal procurement category | FY2025 obligations |
|---|---|---|
| 336611 | Ship Building and Repairing | $518.6M |
| 115310 | Support Activities for Forestry | $515.2M |
| 481212 | Nonscheduled Chartered Freight Air Transportation | $180.2M |
| 237990 | Other Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction | $119.5M |
| 541519 | Other Computer Related Services | $116.5M |
| 236220 | Commercial and Institutional Building Construction | $102.0M |
| 562910 | Remediation Services | $92.6M |
| 237310 | Highway, Street, and Bridge Construction | $56.8M |
| 541715 | Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences (except Nanotechnology and Biotechnology) | $55.4M |
| 334511 | Search, Detection, Navigation, Guidance, Aeronautical, and Nautical System and Instrument Manufacturing | $51.8M |
The charts and figures on this page come from public source files or APIs. Annual sources use the most recent complete year available; partial-year figures are labeled in the text.