Flat-Fee MLS in Gresham, OR
Sell in Gresham with Meydomo
$199 to list, $999 at close. 24/7 synth agent coordination with licensed broker oversight. No percentage commission.
Last updated November 10, 2025
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Gresham at a Glance
Population
110,042
Ranked #4 by population in Oregon.
State Highlights
- • Median home price: ~$482,000
- • Year-over-year growth: +1.6%
- • Portland remains pricey but slowed since 2022
Compliance Snapshot (Oregon)
State Requirements
Seller’s Property Disclosure Statement
Oregon law (ORS 105.462–105.490) requires sellers of 1–4 family residential dwellings to deliver a completed Seller’s Property Disclosure Statement to the buyer **(or buyer’s agent)**. The law lists specific questions that must be answered 'yes', 'no', or 'unknown' about the property’s condition. These include: title/legal issues, water source and any issues, insulation, structural components (roof, foundation, etc.), systems (plumbing, electrical, heating/cooling), presence of pests, hazardous materials (like radon, underground tanks), and any other material defects. Sellers must also disclose if the property is in a designated zone (floodplain, wildfire hazard zone, etc.) The disclosure is to be given to the buyer upon or *before* the buyer’s offer is accepted. If it’s delivered later, the buyer gets 5 days right to revoke the transaction. Certain sales (new construction, trustee/estate sales, between co-owners, etc.) are exempt. Oregon also has a separate requirement under the Domestic Well Testing Act that if a property has a well, the seller must test the well water for arsenic, nitrates, and bacteria and provide results to the buyer and state within 90 days. Additionally, sellers must inform buyers of any known abandoned wells on the property. These items often appear on the disclosure form and as separate reports.
MLS Notices
MLS Practices
Oregon’s primary MLS (RMLS) requires a signed listing agreement. RMLS enforces Clear Cooperation. RMLS listings often mention if the seller’s disclosure is available; agents typically attach the filled Oregon disclosure form PDF to the listing for other agents. In Portland, the Home Energy Score and Report must be included in the listing – RMLS has fields for the score and a PDF attachment for the report. The MLS will fine listings in Portland that don’t have the score as required. Additionally, RMLS has specific fields for well/septic and requires input of the disclosure of those. MLS remarks in Oregon must avoid any protected class references. RMLS also doesn’t allow mentioning a listing is 'coming soon to Zillow' or any external promotion that violates their rules. If the seller disclosure reveals something like 'roof leaks in winter', an agent might note 'roof credit offered' in agent remarks, but MLS doesn’t require that – it’s just common negotiation. The MLS does require a front exterior photo and will not allow images with watermarks or agent branding. Finally, RMLS allows a status called "Bumpable" if the sale is contingent on the buyer’s home selling – this might indirectly signal a disclosure: if the buyer’s home sale fell through due to inspection, etc., but that’s beyond initial disclosure scope.
Federal Baseline
Lead-Based Paint Hazard Disclosure
Federal law (Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992) requires sellers of homes built before 1978 to provide buyers with an EPA lead hazard information pamphlet and disclose any known lead-based paint or hazards, giving buyers a 10-day opportunity to test for lead.
Fair Housing Act (No Discriminatory Advertising)
Under federal (and Oregon) law, advertising a home for sale may not indicate any preference or limitation based on protected classes. Oregon’s protected classes mirror federal plus others like marital status and sexual orientation. Thus, no listing comments such as 'ideal for adults' or 'Catholic neighborhood,' etc., which would violate fair housing.
Total Costs on a $482,000 Sale
| Option | Upfront Fees | Due at Closing | Total Listing Cost | Buyer Agent (3%) | Total Listing & Selling | Savings vs 6% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meydomo Flat-Fee MLS1 | $199 | $999 | $1,198 | $14,460 | $15,658 | $13,262 |
| Housecoin “Flat Fee”2 | $0 | $4,820 | $4,820 | $14,460 | $19,280 | $9,640 |
| Houzeo Silver Plan3 | $249 | $2,410 | $2,659 | $14,460 | $17,119 | $11,801 |
| Traditional 6% Agent4 | $0 | $14,460 | $14,460 | $14,460 | $28,920 | — |
* Buyer-agent line assumes a 3% incentive across every scenario. Adjust in the calculator below to see other scenarios.
1 Meydomo pricing: $199 to launch, $999 at close. Buyer-agent incentives remain optional.
2 Housecoin advertises no upfront cost but charges 1% of sale price at close (marketed as “flat fee”).
3 Houzeo Silver plan: $249 list fee plus 0.5% at close, subject to $999 minimum (houzeo.com/pricing).
4 Traditional listing assumed 3% listing-side commission and 3% buyer-agent commission (typical 6% split).
Commission Savings in Gresham, OR
Compare a traditional 6% listing with Meydomo's $199 upfront + $999 at closing. Adjust the buyer-agent incentive to match your plan.
Enter a sale price and commission assumptions to see the dollar impact of Meydomo's flat fee.
Need statewide details for Oregon?
Visit the full Oregon playbook for statutes, disclosure checklists, and MLS requirements.
View Oregon Guide