Medford Oregon

Where Business
Takes Root.

Medford, Oregon — where low costs, skilled workers, and an unmatched quality of life create fertile ground for businesses to take root, for talent to grow, and for a whole community to thrive.

Oregon Prosperity Roadmap Aligned
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Why Businesses Choose the Rogue Valley

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Your Starting Point

How Can We Help You Grow?

Medford offers fertile ground for every stage of business. Choose your path, or let our AI assistant guide you instantly — any time, day or night.

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Start a Business

Step-by-step launch checklist, permits, licensing, and a full ecosystem of funding and support resources.

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Grow Your Business

Expansion programs, workforce hiring incentives, and partner retention support for established businesses.

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Invest & Develop

Urban Renewal, federal Opportunity Zones, Downtown Medford Association (DMA) storefront grants, and downtown development projects.

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Site Selectors

Commercial district intelligence, cost comparisons, zoning and permitting, fee estimates, and verified incentive programs — built for companies evaluating Medford.

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Oregon's Business Climate — Honestly

Rankings Don't Define Us. They Help Us Grow.

Oregon ranks 39th in CNBC's 2025 Top States for Business and 47th in Business Friendliness. We don't shy away from those numbers — we use them. Around here, we know that the best fertilizer doesn't usually smell like roses. It makes our soil richer, our roots deeper, and our businesses tougher.

The Honest Picture
39th
Overall
47th
Bus. Friendly
14th
Tech & Innovation
19th
Quality of Life

CNBC's methodology weights categories based on what states emphasize in recruitment marketing — not what actually drives business success in a remote-enabled, talent-driven economy. Oregon's cost structure and regulatory complexity are real challenges. But rankings built on a recruitment-era model systematically undervalue what makes places like the Rogue Valley competitive: placemaking, quality of life, and communities where talent chooses to live.

Source: CNBC Top States 2025

The Work Is Already Underway

While the state conversation evolves, Medford has been quietly planting seeds. People and businesses are already choosing this place — and the data reflects it.

+2.1%
Pop. growth since 2020
OR avg: +0.8% · Census Pop. Est. 2024
+8.3%
New business filings YoY
OR avg: +3.1% · Oregon SOS CY2024
580
Building permits (2024)
Up 12% YoY · Census BPS CY2024

Sources: U.S. Census Population Estimates · Oregon Secretary of State · Census Building Permits Survey · Full citations and refresh dates in the Economic Indicators dashboard.

Roots already taking hold:

Economic Improvement District — Council-approved sustained downtown investment
Downtown 2040 Plan — first comprehensive plan in 20+ years
Enterprise Zone + MURA (Medford Urban Renewal Agency) — active tax abatements and storefront grants
Medford EDGE — City of Medford's economic development hub, uniting data, sites, incentives, and dedicated staff support to make it easier to start, grow, and invest in a business here. The site's built-in AI assistant, MEDA, is available 24/7 for personalized guidance.

Ready to Make Medford Yours?

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Economic Profile

Why Medford, Oregon

At the crossroads of California and the Pacific Northwest, Medford is where fertile ground meets real momentum. Whether you're a business exploring expansion, a site selector evaluating the Rogue Valley, a resident invested in your community's future, or an entrepreneur looking for the right place to put down roots — you'll find the data, programs, and people here to help you grow. Explore the highlights below, then dig into the Economic Indicators Dashboard for the full picture — or open MEDA, our AI-powered assistant, anytime for personalized guidance.

Live data · Auto-refreshed
Data sources & acronym glossary — what every citation below means

Every chart and KPI on this dashboard is sourced from official, publicly available datasets. The short codes you see (e.g., ACS S1901, BLS QCEW) reference the exact table or program. Here's what each one stands for:

ACS — American Community Survey (U.S. Census Bureau annual demographic and economic survey). Tables are labeled by code (S1901 = income, B25024 = housing units, etc.).
BLS — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (federal employment, wage, and price-data agency).
LAUS — Local Area Unemployment Statistics (BLS monthly unemployment series for counties and metros).
QCEW — Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (BLS detailed employment and wage data by industry and county).
FRED — Federal Reserve Economic Data (St. Louis Fed time-series database).
FDIC — Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (federal bank-deposit insurer and data publisher).
SOD — Summary of Deposits (FDIC's annual bank-branch deposit report).
FHFA — Federal Housing Finance Agency (publisher of the House Price Index, or HPI).
HPI — House Price Index (FHFA's repeat-sales home-price tracker).
MSA — Metropolitan Statistical Area (Census Bureau definition of a metro region; "Medford MSA" = Jackson County, Oregon).
CBP — County Business Patterns (Census Bureau annual employment and establishment counts by county).
BPS — Building Permits Survey (Census Bureau monthly residential permit data).
BEA — U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (publisher of Gross Domestic Product, or GDP, and regional accounts).
LEHD / LODES — Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics / LEHD Origin-Destination Employment Statistics (Census worker-flow datasets).
NERDE — National Economic Research and Data Exchange at Argonne National Laboratory (regional industry employment compilations).
OED — Oregon Employment Department (state labor-market and projections agency).
SOS — Oregon Secretary of State (state business-registration office).
SBA — U.S. Small Business Administration (federal small-business lender and resource agency).
BTS — U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics (publisher of airport enplanement data).
OHCS — Oregon Housing and Community Services (state housing agency; publishes the Point-in-Time, or PIT, homelessness count).
DHS — Oregon Department of Human Services (state agency; publishes early-childhood and childcare data).
AQI — Air Quality Index (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency air-quality measure reported on AirNow.gov).
RCC / SOU — Rogue Community College / Southern Oregon University (regional higher-education institutions).
MFR — Rogue Valley International–Medford Airport (its three-letter International Air Transport Association airport code is MFR).

Definitions provided so non-specialist readers — entrepreneurs, residents, and partners — can interpret every data point without leaving the page.

What This Data Means

Medford's economy tells a post-pandemic comeback story. Employment rebounded from the 2020 dip and now exceeds pre-pandemic levels, while unemployment at 3.8% sits below the state average — signaling a tight but healthy labor market. The Medford-Grants Pass CSA (the Rogue Valley) reaches ~309,000 residents across Jackson and Josephine Counties, giving businesses access to a substantial consumer base without the cost structures of Portland or California metros.

The business formation surge (+8.3% year-over-year, or YoY) reflects genuine entrepreneurial energy, not just pandemic-era Limited Liability Company (LLC) filings. Combined with $31M in U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) lending flowing into the region, capital is accessible and new ventures are being funded — a strong signal for anyone considering launching here.

The honest challenge: Median household income at $52K is below Portland ($78K) and national metro averages. This means consumer spending power per capita is more modest — but for businesses, it also means lower wage costs and a workforce that values stable employment.

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85,981City Population (Medford, OR)
▲ +2.1% since 2020
Census Pop. Est. · July 2024
$52,040Median Household Income
▲ +4.2% YoY
Census ACS S1901 · 2023 (5-yr)
3.8%Unemployment Rate (Jackson Co.)
▼ Below OR avg (4.4%)
BLS LAUS · Feb 2026
309KRogue Valley Trade Area
Medford-Grants Pass CSA · Jackson + Josephine Co.
Census ACS 5-yr · 2024
Census Pop. Estimates · ACS S1901 · BLS LAUS · data.census.gov · bls.gov/lau · Refreshed monthly (BLS) / annually (Census) · Last: Feb 2026 (BLS) · July 2024 (Census Pop. Est.) · ACS 2023 5-yr
Employment Growth (Thousands)
NERDE / Argonne National Lab · BLS QCEW · nerde.anl.gov · Refreshed quarterly · Last: Q1 2025
Business Formation
1,420New Business Applications▲ +8.3% YoYOregon SOS · CY2024
78%LLC Formation RateMost common structureOregon SOS · CY2024
Census Business Formation (FRED) · Oregon SOS · sos.oregon.gov · Refreshed monthly · Last: Feb 2025
SBA Lending Activity — Rogue Valley
$18.2MSBA 7(a) Lending Volume▲ 2.4x per capita vs. OR avgSBA · FY2024
$12.8MSBA 504 Lending Volume▲ Strong capital formationSBA · FY2024
142SBA Loans ApprovedSBA · FY2024
SBA Portland District · sba.gov/district/portland · Refreshed annually · Last: FY2024
Rogue Valley International–Medford Airport (airport code: MFR)

Medford is served by a full-service commercial airport — known by its three-letter International Air Transport Association (IATA) code MFR — providing direct connectivity to West Coast hubs and beyond. Regional accessibility is a critical site-selection factor for businesses evaluating Medford.

~800KAnnual Enplanements
▲ Post-pandemic recovery
BTS · FY2024
4Commercial Airlines Serving MFR
Alaska · United · American · Avelo
flymfr.com · Apr 2026
10+Nonstop Destination Cities
Seattle · SF · LA · Phoenix · Denver
flymfr.com · Apr 2026
~10 minDrive to City Center
~3 mi · Biddle Rd / I-5
Google Maps · Apr 2026
SEA · PDXPacific Northwest Hubs (direct)▲ Multiple daily flightsflymfr.com · Apr 2026
SFO · LAX · SANCalifornia Hubs (direct)Major market connectionsflymfr.com · Apr 2026
PHX · DENInterior Hubs (direct/connect)Transcon accessflymfr.com · Apr 2026
Rogue Valley International–Medford Airport · flymfr.com · BTS Air Carrier Statistics · transtats.bts.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: BTS FY2024 · MFR schedules current
What This Data Means

At $365K median home price, Medford is roughly 34% cheaper than Portland and 50–65% cheaper than comparable California markets — a tangible recruiting advantage that lets employees' dollars go further. Median household income of $52,300 is below state and national averages, which creates an honest tension: strong purchasing power relative to housing costs, but wage growth is a retention factor employers need to watch.

The 49% renter cost-burden rate — households spending 30%+ of income on rent — is a workforce retention risk that the city is actively addressing through permitting acceleration, zoning updates, and the Downtown 2040 plan's mixed-use provisions. The 4.2% rental vacancy rate signals a tight market, supporting multifamily investment.

The honest challenge: The home price-to-income ratio has risen as in-migration from higher-cost markets pushed prices up faster than local wages. Poverty at 16.2% (above state average) reflects a service-sector economy with a significant low-wage workforce. These are real factors for employers in retail, food service, and healthcare — and real opportunities for affordable housing developers and workforce program funders.

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$365KMedian Home Price (Medford MSA)
▲ 34% below Portland
FHFA HPI / Zillow · Q3 2024
36,200Total Housing Units (City of Medford)
All structure types
Census ACS B25024 · 2023
580Building Permits Issued
▲ +12% YoY
Census BPS · CY2024
55%Owner-Occupied Rate
vs 62% OR avg
Census ACS B25003 · 2023
FHFA House Price Index · Zillow Research · Census ACS B25024 / B25003 · Census Building Permits Survey · data.census.gov · fhfa.gov/data/hpi · Refreshed monthly–annually · Last: FHFA Q3 2024 · Census BPS Jan 2025 · ACS 2023 5-yr
$52,300Median Household Income (Medford)
vs $72K OR · $75K US
Census ACS S1901 · 2023
$50,400Avg. Annual Wage (Jackson Co.)
▲ +3.8% YoY
BLS QCEW · 2023
16.2%Poverty Rate (Medford)
▲ vs 11.4% OR avg
Census ACS S1701 · 2023
49%Renters Cost-Burdened (30%+)
vs 46% US avg
Census ACS B25070 · 2023
Census ACS S1901 · S1701 · B25070 · BLS QCEW · data.census.gov · bls.gov/cew · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023 5-yr · BLS QCEW 2023
Housing Units by Structure Type
58%Single-Family DetachedACS B25024 · 2023
24%Multi-Family (5+ units)ACS B25024 · 2023
10%Duplex / Triplex / QuadACS B25024 · 2023
5%Townhouse / AttachedACS B25024 · 2023
3%Mobile / ManufacturedACS B25024 · 2023
Census ACS B25024 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
Building Permits Issued (Annual)
Census Building Permits · census.gov/bps · Refreshed monthly · Last: Jan 2025
Household Income & Home Price — Regional Comparison

Median household income vs. median home price across peer markets. The gap between income and home price — the affordability ratio — is a key workforce recruitment and retention signal.

Census ACS S1901 · data.census.gov · Zillow Research · FHFA House Price Index · fhfa.gov/data/hpi · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023 / FHFA Q3 2024
Rental Market Conditions
$1,150Median Gross Rent / Month▲ vs $1,625 PortlandACS B25064 · 2023
4.2%Rental Vacancy Rate▼ Tight marketACS B25004 · 2023
45%Renter-Occupied UnitsHigh demand for rentalsACS B25003 · 2023
29%Income Spent on Rent (median renter)Near 30% thresholdACS B25070 · 2023
Census ACS B25064 · B25070 · B25004 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
Renter Cost Burden Distribution

Share of Medford renters by gross rent as % of household income (Census ACS B25070).

Census ACS B25070 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
FHFA House Price Index — Medford MSA (Indexed, 2000=100)

The Federal Housing Finance Agency's all-transactions House Price Index tracks appreciation over time. Medford's index has risen substantially since 2019 as in-migration accelerated — signaling equity gains for owners, but increased affordability pressure for new buyers.

FHFA House Price Index (All-Transactions, Medford OR MSA) · fhfa.gov/data/hpi · Refreshed quarterly · Last: Q3 2024
Income & Economic Security
16.2%Persons in Poverty — Medford▲ vs 11.4% OregonACS S1701 · 2023
22.1%Children in Poverty (under 18)▲ Above state avgACS S1701 · 2023
$52,300Median HH Income — Medford$72K OR · $75K USACS S1901 · 2023
$50,400Avg. Annual Wage — Jackson Co.▲ BLS QCEWBLS QCEW · 2023
Census ACS S1701 · S1901 · data.census.gov · BLS QCEW · bls.gov/cew · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023 / BLS 2023
Owner vs. Renter Occupancy Distribution

Medford's 45% renter rate (above Oregon's 38% avg) signals strong rental demand and multifamily investment opportunity. Owner-occupancy trails state averages, a pattern common in in-migration markets.

Census ACS B25003 · B25008 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
Community Well-Being Indicators
Homelessness (PIT Count) Oregon's statewide Point-in-Time count is conducted annually. Jackson County data is published by Oregon Housing & Community Services (OHCS) each spring. Current count: View OHCS PIT Data →
Childcare Access Licensed childcare capacity relative to working-age children ages 0–5 is tracked by Oregon DHS Early Childhood Programs. Jackson County faces a documented childcare gap — a known workforce barrier. Oregon DHS Childcare Data →
Air Quality Medford sits in the Rogue Valley airshed — a geographic bowl that can trap smoke and inversions. AQI data: AirNow.gov live AQI →
Oregon OHCS PIT Count · Oregon DHS Early Childhood Programs · SOESD · oregon.gov/ohcs · Updated annually
What This Data Means

Medford's industry diversification is a genuine competitive advantage. No single sector exceeds 22% of employment — meaning the economy doesn't rise and fall with one industry's fortunes. Healthcare's dominance (+18% projected 10-year growth) creates a stable employment anchor, while manufacturing and food/ag provide traded-sector depth that brings outside dollars into the region.

The 10-year projections show healthcare, professional services, and construction leading growth — all sectors where Medford has existing infrastructure and workforce pipeline advantages through Asante and Providence (regional hospital systems), Southern Oregon University (SOU), and Rogue Community College (RCC). For entrepreneurs, this means a growing customer base across multiple verticals.

The honest challenge: Government employment is projected to slightly decline (-2%), and some traditional sectors like timber-related manufacturing face long-term structural headwinds. The opportunity lies in the emerging tech sector — still small (8%) but growing as remote workers and cost-sensitive startups discover the Rogue Valley.

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~10,800Active Businesses (Jackson Co.)
▲ Oregon SOS / CBP est.
Oregon SOS · CY2024
1,420New Businesses / Year
▲ +8.3% YoY
Oregon SOS · CY2024
68KTotal Nonfarm Employment (Jackson Co.)
▲ Post-pandemic recovery
BLS QCEW · Q1 2025
22%Healthcare Employment Share
Largest single sector
BLS QCEW / NERDE · Q1 2025
Oregon SOS · Census CBP · BLS QCEW · NERDE/Argonne · sos.oregon.gov · nerde.anl.gov · Refreshed monthly–quarterly · Last: SOS Feb 2025 · BLS QCEW Q1 2025
Active Business Count Trend — Jackson County
Oregon SOS Active Entities · Census CBP · sos.oregon.gov · census.gov/cbp · Refreshed annually · Last: 2024
Industry Employment Mix
NERDE / Argonne National Lab · BLS QCEW · nerde.anl.gov · Refreshed quarterly · Last: Q1 2025
10-Year Employment Projections (Jackson County)
+18%Healthcare & Social Assistance▲ Fastest growingOED · 2024–2034 cycle
+12%Professional & Technical Services▲ Strong growthOED · 2024–2034 cycle
+9%Construction▲ SteadyOED · 2024–2034 cycle
+7%Accommodation & Food Services▲ Tourism-drivenOED · 2024–2034 cycle
+4%Manufacturing▲ StableOED · 2024–2034 cycle
-2%Government▼ Slight declineOED · 2024–2034 cycle
Oregon Employment Dept. · qualityinfo.org · Refreshed biennially · Last: 2024–2034 cycle
What This Data Means

The 57.8% labor force participation rate tells two stories. On one hand, it's below the national average (~62%), reflecting Medford's older population and retiree community. On the other, it means there is latent labor supply — workers who could re-enter the workforce with the right incentives, flexible schedules, or remote options. This is a pool that many employers overlook.

The 4,200 annual graduates from Rogue Community College (RCC) and Southern Oregon University (SOU) provide a genuine local talent pipeline — particularly strong in healthcare (nursing, medical tech), business, education, and trades. Rogue Workforce Partnership (RWP) and Oregon's WorkSource job-matching system connect employers to these graduates and offer On-the-Job Training (OJT) funding that offsets training costs.

The honest challenge: Recruiting specialized tech, engineering, or executive talent can be harder in a smaller metro. However, remote work normalization is changing this calculus — Medford's quality of life becomes a draw for distributed teams. Employers who offer hybrid arrangements are finding unexpected success recruiting from Portland and California.

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3.8%Unemployment Rate (Jackson Co.)
▼ vs 4.4% OR avg
BLS LAUS · Feb 2026
57.8%Labor Force Participation Rate
vs 61.4% OR avg
Census ACS S2301 · 2023
2,400Avg. Monthly Job Openings
▲ Steady employer demand
OED Job Vacancy Survey · 2024
4,200Annual RCC / SOU Graduates
Local workforce pipeline
RCC + SOU IR · AY 2023–24
BLS LAUS · Census ACS S2301 · Oregon Employment Dept. (Job Vacancy Survey, 2024) · RCC & SOU Institutional Research · bls.gov/lau · qualityinfo.org · Refreshed monthly–annually · Last: BLS Feb 2026 · OED 2024 · ACS 2023
Unemployment Rate Trend — Jackson County
BLS LAUS (Local Area Unemployment Statistics) · bls.gov/lau · Refreshed monthly · Last: Feb 2026
Labor Force Participation by Age
72.4%Ages 25–54 (prime working)Core labor forceACS S2301 · 2023
62.1%Ages 20–24Early career / studentsACS S2301 · 2023
44.8%Ages 55–64Pre-retirementACS S2301 · 2023
12.3%Ages 65+Retirement-ageACS S2301 · 2023
Census ACS S2301 · FRED · fred.stlouisfed.org · Refreshed quarterly · Last: Q4 2024
Educational Attainment — Population 25+ (Medford vs. Oregon vs. U.S.)

Medford's bachelor's+ rate (23.4%) trails Oregon (33.2%) and the U.S. (35.4%) — a structural workforce challenge for employers recruiting professional and technical talent. RCC and SOU are the primary pipelines for certificate, associate's, and bachelor's credentials locally.

Census ACS S1501 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
Commute Times — Medford vs. Benchmarks

A mean commute of 18.2 minutes vs. the 27-minute national average means Medford workers spend ~44% less time commuting annually — a real quality-of-life and retention advantage.

Census ACS B08012 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
Employment Center — Traffic Flow

Medford is a net employment importer — more workers commute in from surrounding communities than residents commute out, confirming its role as the regional employment hub for Southern Oregon.

~38,200Workers Commuting In to Medford▲ Employment centerLEHD LODES · 2022
~22,400Residents Commuting OutNet inflow: +15,800LEHD LODES · 2022
82%Drive Alone (primary mode)ACS B08006 · 2023
18.2 minMean Commute Time▼ vs 27 min U.S. avgACS B08012 · 2023
Census LEHD LODES (Origin-Destination) · ACS B08006 · OnTheMap · Refreshed annually · Last: LODES 2022
10-Year Workforce Projections
+6,800Projected New Jobs (10yr)▲ Jackson CountyOED · 2024–2034 cycle
+4,200Replacement Openings (annual)Retirements + turnoverOED · 2024–2034 cycle
55.2%Employment-Population RatioWorking-age adultsACS S2301 · 2023
Oregon Employment Dept. · qualityinfo.org · Refreshed biennially · Last: 2024
What This Data Means

Medford's population has grown to nearly 86,000 — the broader Jackson County metro exceeds 223,000 and is the dominant economic center between Sacramento and Portland. The median age of 39.4 mirrors Oregon's average, but the age distribution tells a richer story: a 16% retiree population anchors the healthcare sector, while a growing 25–44 cohort signals household formation, consumer spending, and workforce expansion.

The Hispanic/Latino population (16.8%) is the fastest-growing demographic — a significant and underserved market for bilingual services, culturally relevant businesses, and inclusive hiring. Cross-referencing with the workforce tab, this cohort is also an important labor supply channel for healthcare, agriculture, and construction sectors.

The honest challenge: At 16.2% poverty (above state average) and a median household income below state and national norms, discretionary spending per capita is modest. The mean commute of just 18.2 minutes — well below the national 27-minute average — confirms Medford's role as an employment center where workers live close to their jobs, reducing commute friction and supporting workforce retention.

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85,981City Population (Medford, OR)
▲ Growing steadily
Census Pop. Est. · July 2024
223,259Jackson County Population
Total county residents
Census Pop. Est. · July 2024
39.4Median Age (Medford)
vs 39.5 OR statewide
Census ACS B01002 · 2023
2.48Avg Household Size (Medford)
Family-friendly community
Census ACS B25010 · 2023
Census Population Estimates · ACS B01002 · B25010 · census.gov/popest · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: Pop. Est. July 2024 · ACS 2023 5-yr
Population by Race & Ethnicity
Census ACS B03002 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
Age Distribution — City of Medford
Census ACS B01001 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
Population Growth Trend (City of Medford, thousands)
Census Pop. Estimates · census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: July 2024
Transportation Mode to Work

Medford is a car-dependent metro — but the short mean commute time (18.2 min vs. 27 min national avg) signals a compact, accessible employment geography that reduces workforce friction.

Census ACS B08006 · B08012 · data.census.gov · Refreshed annually · Last: ACS 2023
What This Data Means

$3.8 billion in bank deposits concentrated across 42 local branches signals a community with substantial banking infrastructure and capital reserves. Umpqua Bank's $1.24B market share reflects deep local roots — they were founded in Southern Oregon and understand regional businesses. For entrepreneurs, this means lenders who know the market and will meet with you face-to-face — a stark contrast to dealing with faceless national banks.

$31M in U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) lending (2024) demonstrates active federal capital deployment into the Rogue Valley. The mix of SBA 7(a) and 504 loans means both working capital and real estate/equipment financing are flowing. Craft3 — a Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI), meaning a federally certified mission-driven lender — adds capital for businesses that don't fit traditional bank criteria.

The honest challenge: Access to venture capital (VC) and growth equity is limited locally — the nearest VC ecosystem is Portland or the Bay Area. High-growth startups seeking Series A+ funding may need to look beyond the region. The Oregon Entrepreneurs Network (OEN) bridges this gap with statewide angel networks and pitch competitions.

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$4.8BJackson County Gross Domestic Product (GDP, est.)
▲ +3.1% YoY · Bureau of Economic Analysis
BEA County GDP · 2022
$3.8BTotal Bank Deposits (Jackson Co.)
▲ +5.2% YoY
FDIC SOD · June 2024
$31MSBA Lending (7a + 504)
Combined volume
SBA · FY2024
42Bank & Credit Union (CU) Branch Locations
Medford city limits
FDIC / National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) · June 2024
BEA County GDP · FDIC Summary of Deposits · NCUA · SBA Portland District · bea.gov · fdic.gov · sba.gov/district/portland · Refreshed annually–semi-annually · Last: BEA 2022 · FDIC June 2024 · SBA FY2024
Jackson County GDP — Sector Contribution (est.)
BEA County-Level GDP · bea.gov · Oregon Employment Dept. · Refreshed annually · Last: BEA 2022 (most recent county vintage)
Annual Retail Sales & Tax Base Growth
~$3.2BAnnual Retail Sales — Jackson Co.▲ No-sales-tax advantageTravel Medford / OR DOR · FY2024
~$400MTransient Lodging Tax (TLT)Tourism-driven revenueTravel Medford TLT · FY2024
+6.2%Assessed Value Growth▲ Medford tax baseJackson Co. Assessor · FY2024
$14.1BTotal Assessed Value — MedfordCity tax baseJackson Co. Assessor · FY2024
Oregon DOR · Oregon Dept. of Revenue · Jackson Co. Assessor · Travel Medford TLT Reports · oregon.gov/dor · Refreshed annually · Last: FY2024
Consumer Price Index — Pacific Region vs. U.S. All Cities

BLS does not publish a Medford-specific CPI. The Pacific region index (which includes Oregon) is the closest relevant benchmark. Medford's lower housing costs typically keep effective cost-of-living below the Pacific regional average.

BLS Consumer Price Index — Pacific Region (Series ID: CUURS49ASA0) · U.S. City Average (Series ID: CUUR0000SA0) · bls.gov/cpi · Refreshed monthly · Last: Feb 2026
FDIC Deposit Concentration — Jackson County
$1.24BUmpqua BankLargest deposit shareFDIC SOD · June 2024
$620MBanner BankFDIC SOD · June 2024
$480MPeople's Bank of CommerceFDIC SOD · June 2024
$390MUS Bank / Wells FargoNational banksFDIC SOD · June 2024
$360MRogue Credit UnionLargest local CUNCUA · June 2024
$310MOther InstitutionsFDIC + NCUA · June 2024
FDIC Summary of Deposits · fdic.gov · NCUA · ncua.gov · Refreshed semi-annually · Last: June 2024
Oregon Secretary of State — Business Registrations
1,420New Filings (Jackson Co.)▲ +8.3%Oregon SOS · CY2024
78%LLC FormationsDominant structureOregon SOS · CY2024
14%Corporation FormationsOregon SOS · CY2024
Oregon SOS · sos.oregon.gov · Refreshed monthly · Last: Feb 2025
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Cross-reference sources · Compare Medford to other markets · Analyze trends for your industry · Build a business case with local data

Cost, location, and workforce get a company to Medford. What helps it stay — and what helps its people stay — is the texture of life around the workday. Downtown, the outdoors, and the region's food and wine scene function here as social infrastructure: the places where hires get made, clients get hosted, teams decompress, and relocating families decide they'll stick. For employers, that infrastructure is unpriced leverage.

Four ways quality of life shows up on the balance sheet
01 · Connection
Where work happens outside work

Downtown cafés, breweries, wine bars, and public markets give founders and teams room to meet that isn't a conference room. Early hires, referrals, and local partnerships tend to start in rooms like those.

02 · Recovery
Recharge within an hour

Crater Lake, the Rogue River, Mt. Ashland, and the Cascade–Siskiyou backcountry are close enough to use on a weeknight. 276 sunny days a year extend the usable calendar. Burnout is a retention cost employers don't have to carry when the reset is this accessible.

03 · Belonging
A shorter on-ramp for new arrivals

A walkable downtown, neighborhood-scale civic events, the Oregon Shakespeare Festival (OSF) arts calendar nine miles south in Ashland, and family amenities shorten the integration period for relocating employees and their households. The people who feel settled inside six months are the ones who stay.

04 · Recruitment
A pitch that closes candidates

Remote-era candidates compare places, not just offers. Medford gives employers something concrete to sell: a credible life at a credible cost, within direct-flight or drive range of Seattle, Portland, the Bay Area, and the Oregon coast.

IEDC · 2025 State of the Field

The International Economic Development Council's 2025 State of the Field report, drawing on 691 practitioner responses, finds that economic developers increasingly tie success to quality of life — the availability of housing, infrastructure, and community amenities — alongside traditional measures like job creation and tax base. That maps onto the concept of third places: the cafés, bars, parks, and shared tables outside home and work where trust, referrals, and belonging take shape. Downtown density, walkability, and cultural anchors aren't amenities in the marketing sense — they're the social infrastructure that turns a job offer into a life decision.

The compensation advantage employers don't pay for

A $365K median home price and an 18-minute commute give Medford a quality-of-life-per-dollar ratio that most West Coast metros can't match. For a candidate relocating from Portland or California, that typically pencils out as a de facto raise — a recruiting asset the employer doesn't fund.

$365KMedian Home Price (Medford MSA)▲ ~34% below PortlandFHFA HPI / Zillow · Q3 2024
18.2 minMean Commute (Medford)▼ vs 27 min U.S. avgCensus ACS B08012 · 2023
No Sales TaxStatewide (Oregon)Compounds the take-home gapOregon DOR · Current
FHFA House Price Index · Zillow Research · Census ACS B08012 · Oregon DOR · fhfa.gov/data/hpi · data.census.gov · Refreshed quarterly–annually · Last: FHFA Q3 2024 · ACS 2023 5-yr
Quality of life is half the pitch. Workforce, incentives, and cost are the rest.
Start a Business → Talk to Our Team →

Medford's workforce ecosystem is more robust than its metro size suggests. Two post-secondary institutions, a business-led workforce coalition, a WorkSource one-stop, and state-funded training programs combine to give local employers access to talent pipelines, hiring subsidies, and custom training — often at no cost. For employers relocating from larger metros, these services typically exceed what was available through large urban workforce systems.

Workforce Differentiators
4,200Annual RCC / SOU Graduates▲ Local talent pipelineRCC + SOU IR · AY 2023–24
Up to 50%OJT Wage Reimbursement▲ Via RWP / WorkSourceRogue Workforce Partnership · 2024
3.8%Unemployment Rate (Jackson Co.)▼ Below OR avg (4.4%)BLS LAUS · Feb 2026
Workforce challenge: Medford's bachelor's+ attainment rate (23.4%) trails Oregon (33.2%) and the U.S. (35.4%). For roles requiring 4-year degrees, employers may need to recruit regionally or offer relocation.
The momentum is real: RCC and SOU are actively expanding enrollment in allied health, computer science, and business programs. Rogue Workforce Partnership is deploying new OJT and apprenticeship pathways. Oregon Employment Department sector partnerships are targeting the region's highest-growth industries. The gap is real — but so is the coalition of educators, employers, and public agencies closing it. This is where workforce investment meets willing partners, and businesses that engage early will help shape the talent pipeline they need. Talk to our team about workforce planning →
BLS LAUS · RCC + SOU Institutional Research · Rogue Workforce Partnership · bls.gov/lau · rogueworkforce.org · worksourcerogue.org · Refreshed monthly–annually · Last: BLS Feb 2026 · RCC/SOU AY 2023–24

Click any industry to explore key employers, data, and opportunities.

Community

Voices from Medford's Business & Community Leaders

Real companies putting down real roots. These are the stories of businesses that chose Medford — and what they found when they got here.

Quotes shared with permission by Medford, Oregon business and community leaders. Want to add your story? Contact econdev@cityofmedford.org.

Ready to put down roots?

Start a Business in Medford →
For Site Selectors, Developers & Relocating Businesses

Site Selector

This page is built for companies that have chosen Medford and need to finalize the details. Use the Area Intelligence Report for a tailored area analysis, the commercial district guide to match your concept to a corridor, the cost-of-doing-business and fee estimators to pencil out your numbers, and the zoning and incentive tools to close out your due diligence. No PDF hunting, no phone tag.

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86,000

City population · 223K metro · Largest city between Sacramento and Portland on I-5.

Census Pop. Est. · July 2024
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30–45%

Average cost savings vs. California across manufacturing, tech, and retail operations.

CoStar (commercial real estate data) / BLS (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics) · 2024
✈️
MFR Airport

Rogue Valley International–Medford Airport (airport code MFR). Direct flights: Seattle, Portland, San Francisco (SF), Los Angeles (LA), Phoenix, Denver · ~10 min from city center.

flymfr.com · Apr 2026
Census Population Estimates · CoStar Commercial Real Estate · BLS Wage Data · Rogue Valley International–Medford Airport · census.gov/popest · flymfr.com · Refreshed annually · Last: Census Pop. Est. July 2024 · CoStar / BLS 2024

🌱 Why Medford? Learn why site selectors, developers, and investors choose to do business here — then, when you're ready, use the tools on this page to plan your project and close your deals.

Full Economic Profile →

Medford's commercial landscape is diverse — from downtown mixed-use to highway commercial corridors and industrial parks. Describe your business below and our AI will analyze which areas best fit your needs, then generate a branded one-pager you can download and share with your business partners, investors, or team. The report explains every program and acronym it references — including Enterprise Zone, MURA (Medford Urban Renewal Agency), DMA (Downtown Medford Association), SBA (U.S. Small Business Administration), WOTC (Work Opportunity Tax Credit), and EDLF (Oregon Economic Development Loan Fund) — so you can read it without a glossary.

Takes ~15 seconds. Powered by MEDA AI.

Medford's commercial geography serves different business needs. Use the district guide below to understand which areas align with your concept — then explore parcels and zoning detail in the City's Medford Land Information (GIS) system.

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Explore Parcels in Detail

Medford's Land Information system (MLI) lets you search by address, view zoning layers, lot boundaries, utilities, and ownership records. Open it to explore specific properties.

Open GIS Map →
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Ready to Tour Properties?

A local commercial broker can help you find and negotiate the right space. Search active listings on these platforms:

Medford's cost structure is one of its strongest competitive advantages. No state sales tax, industrial land at a fraction of California pricing, and wage levels that are lower than Portland but competitive enough to attract and retain quality talent. Use the calculator below to compare costs for your business type.

Enter any U.S. ZIP to add a 5th comparison market — Austin, Boise, Denver, NYC, and dozens more are supported.
$0State Sales Tax (Oregon)Oregon advantageOregon DOR · Current
$4–8Industrial Land ($/sqft)vs $20–50 CACoStar Commercial · Q4 2024
$12–18Office Lease ($/sqft)vs $35–65 Bay AreaCoStar Commercial · Q4 2024
$365KMedian Home Price (Medford MSA)34% below PortlandFHFA HPI / Zillow · Q3 2024
BLS QCEW · Census ACS · Oregon Dept. of Revenue · CoStar Commercial RE · FHFA House Price Index · Zillow Research · bls.gov/cew · fhfa.gov/data/hpi · Refreshed quarterly–annually · Last: CoStar Q4 2024 · FHFA Q3 2024 · BLS QCEW 2023

Medford's land use is governed by the Medford Land Development Code (MLDC). Your planned use must be permitted (P), conditionally permitted (C), or authorized as a special use (Ps/Cs) in the zone where your site is located. The table below summarizes Medford's commercial and industrial zoning designations per MLDC Section 10.337. If your project will develop or re-develop the site (new construction, additions, new parking, subdivision, zone change, or a change of use that triggers site review), Medford Planning offers a Pre-Application Conference to scope the Land Use Review — it's the smartest first step. If you're simply moving into an existing space or doing interior tenant improvements, you can go straight to Development Services (Building Safety + Business Licensing) for your building permit and business license.

Zone Code Designation Typical Uses EZ Eligible
C-S/PService Commercial & Professional OfficeOffices, clinics, personal services, restaurants (without entertainment), banks, insurance. Most flexible for professional uses. MURA & DMA eligible.
C-NNeighborhood CommercialSmall-scale retail, grocery (≤25K sqft), pharmacy, personal services, small offices serving surrounding neighborhoods.
C-CCommunity CommercialGeneral retail, restaurants, hotels, auto dealers, medical offices, department stores. Biddle Road, Crater Lake Hwy corridors.
C-RRegional CommercialLarge-scale retail, regional shopping, commercial recreation, broadcasting, wholesale. Broadest commercial permissions.
C-HHeavy CommercialFueling stations, motels, trucking, wholesale, light manufacturing. Typically along arterial / state-highway frontage. EZ eligible if inside the Jackson County Enterprise Zone boundary and use qualifies under ORS 285C.✓*
I-LLight IndustrialManufacturing, warehousing, distribution, contractor yards, food processing. Enclosed/screened operations. EZ eligible if inside the Jackson County Enterprise Zone boundary and use qualifies under ORS 285C.✓*
I-GGeneral IndustrialBroad manufacturing, heavy equipment, chemicals, lumber/wood products, metal fabrication. Fewer restrictions than I-L. EZ eligible if inside the Jackson County Enterprise Zone boundary and use qualifies under ORS 285C.✓*
I-HHeavy IndustrialPetroleum refining, sawmills, heavy processing, bulk storage. Fewest restrictions on operations, noise, outdoor activity. EZ eligible if inside the Jackson County Enterprise Zone boundary and use qualifies under ORS 285C.✓*

P = Permitted · C = Conditional Use Permit required · Ps/Cs = Special Use regulations apply · ✓* EZ eligibility depends on (1) the parcel being inside the Jackson County Enterprise Zone boundary AND (2) the business activity qualifying under Oregon ORS 285C (typically traded-sector: manufacturing, processing, distribution, HQ, call center, eligible hotel). Source: MLDC 10.337 — Uses Permitted in Commercial & Industrial Zoning Districts. Always verify with Medford Planning.

🗺️ Land Use (Planning)

1. Zoning Verification Letter ($82) — confirm permitted use
2. Pre-Application Conference ($600) — scope, issues, timeline. Credited toward your application fee if you submit within 6 months and cost > $400.
3. Site Plan & Architectural Review (Type II/III · $3,808) — 4–12 weeks depending on type
Source: 2025 Medford Planning Fee Schedule (eff. 8/1/2025; CPI-U West COLA each year).

🏗️ Building (Building Safety)

1. Building Permit — plans, specs, valuation. Review: 4–6 weeks. Plan Review = 65% of permit fee; Fire Life Safety Plan Review = +40%; Planning Plan Review = 1.5% of valuation (cap $7,500).
2. Fire & Life Safety — sprinklers, alarms, occupancy calculations
3. Certificate of Occupancy — final inspections before opening (no separate fee — bundled in the building permit)
Source: 2025 Medford Master Fee Schedule. Use the Development Fee Estimator below for project-specific dollar figures.
📋

Developing or re-developing a site? Start with a Pre-Application Conference

If your project involves new construction, an addition, new parking, a subdivision, a zone change, or a change of use that triggers site review, meet with Planning staff first. They'll scope the Land Use Review (Types I–IV) and flag potential issues before you commit. If you're simply opening in existing commercial space — no site changes — skip the Pre-App and go straight to Development Services for your business license and building permit.

Pre-App Request →

Get a ballpark estimate of fees for your commercial project. Actual fees depend on project-specific factors — always confirm with Building Safety before finalizing your pro forma.

⚠️ Estimates only — based on the 2025 City of Medford, Oregon fee schedules (effective 8/1/2025). Does not include MEP or fire suppression permits. SDCs apply to new construction and additions. 2025 Master Fee Schedule (PDF) → · 2025 Planning Fee Schedule (PDF) →

Program Type Benefit Source
Enterprise Zone (3–5yr)Tax AbatementProperty tax exemption on new plant, equipment & real propertyState / Local
Strategic Investment ProgramTax Exemption15-year property tax exemption on investments >$150MState
Business Expansion ProgramCash IncentiveForgivable loan for traded-sector employers creating 50+ jobsState
Opportunity ZonesTax DeferralCapital gains deferral & 100% exclusion after 10-year holdFederal
WOTC Tax CreditsTax CreditUp to $9,600/hire from qualifying target groupsFederal
SBA 504 LoansLoanUp to $5M for real estate & equipment — below-market ratesFederal
MURA Development IncentivesGrantFaçade grants up to $30K + downtown activation programsLocal
Construction-in-Process ExemptionTax ExemptionProperty tax exemption during active constructionState
🔍 Screen all 29 programs with the Incentive Finder →

This is a curated selection for site selectors. The full Incentive Finder screens against all 29 programs based on your specific business profile.

Have questions about Medford?

Our Economic Development team provides free technical assistance and introductions to local resources while protecting your confidential information.

Get in Touch →
New Business

Launch Your Business in Medford

Fertile ground and a full ecosystem of support — from idea to open doors. Medford's partners are ready to help you grow roots and thrive.

🌱 Want the case for Medford first? The tools on this page help you plan a launch and assume Medford is already your destination. If you'd like the broader picture — economy, workforce, cost of doing business, and quality of life — Why Medford lays it out, then circle back here when you're ready to build.

Explore Why Medford →
⏱️

Typical 4–6 Weeks

From business registration to permit approval for most business types in Medford.

🤝

Free Concierge Help

Our team walks you through every step. Schedule a call →

💬

MEDA Agent 24/7

Use the chat button (bottom right) for instant answers on permits, zoning, licensing, and local programs.

Launching a business in Medford follows a clear, manageable sequence. Most new businesses move from registration to open doors in 4–6 weeks. Oregon has no sales tax and a straightforward business registration process through the Secretary of State. Development Services (Building Safety + Business Licensing, in Community Development) is your front door for business licenses, building permits, and occupancy. If your project will develop or re-develop a site, the Planning Division also offers a Pre-Application Conference to scope a Land Use Review before you commit.

💬 Ask MEDA for a personalized checklist →

📘 Before You Seek Funding: Financial Readiness 101

Most lenders and investors won't consider your application without two things: a solid business plan and a financial pro forma (a projected income statement showing your expected revenue, costs, and profitability over 1–3 years). Even grant programs typically require financial documentation.

A pro forma isn't a guarantee of results — it's your best-educated projection of how the business will perform financially. It tells a lender or investor: "I've done the homework, and here's why this business can repay the loan or generate a return."

What a basic pro forma includes
Revenue Projections

Monthly/annual sales estimates based on market research, pricing, and customer volume

Cost of Goods Sold

Direct costs: materials, labor, supplies needed to deliver your product or service

Operating Expenses

Rent, utilities, insurance, payroll, marketing, professional fees, permits, licenses

Startup Costs

One-time costs: build-out, equipment, inventory, deposits, legal/incorporation fees

Cash Flow Projection

Monthly cash in vs. cash out — shows when you'll break even and need reserves

Loan Service / Debt

Monthly loan payments and interest — lenders use this to assess your ability to repay

⚠️ Not legal or financial advice. This overview and any template are educational starting points only. We strongly recommend working with a qualified accountant or financial advisor for your specific situation. The Rogue Small Business Development Center (Rogue SBDC), hosted at Rogue Community College, offers free, one-on-one help building your business plan and financials — they are the best first stop. sbdc.roguecc.edu →

Multi-tab branded workbook — opens in Excel, Numbers, or Google Sheets
👷

Rogue Workforce Partnership

Business-led coalition offering employer services, on-the-job training (OJT) funds, recruitment support, and WorkSource Oregon connections. Free to businesses.

rogueworkforce.org →
🎓

Rogue Community College

Customized employer training, apprenticeship programs, professional development, and credit programs in healthcare, trades, technology, and business.

roguecc.edu →
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Southern Oregon University

SOU's Innovation Hub, business programs, and workforce development initiatives create a steady pipeline of bachelor's and graduate-level talent for Medford employers.

sou.edu →
🔗

WorkSource Rogue Valley

Free hiring support: job posting, applicant screening, wage reimbursements, and OJT programs through the state WorkSource system. Walk-in or call.

worksourcerogue.org →
📋

WOTC Tax Credits

The Work Opportunity Tax Credit (federal) gives employers up to $9,600 per new hire from qualifying target groups. Oregon has systems to expedite documentation.

Oregon WOTC info →
🌱

Oregon Work Share

Avoid layoffs during slow periods by temporarily reducing hours and supplementing wages with partial unemployment benefits — keeping your trained workforce intact.

Oregon Work Share →

Already operating a business in Medford?

Expansion planning, workforce incentives, Enterprise Zone abatements, and dedicated support — we're your growth partner.

Grow Your Business →
Incentives, Expansion & Growth Support

Grow Your Business

Whether you're expanding an existing operation or exploring what Medford has to offer, our Incentive Finder can help you identify programs you may be eligible for — from tax abatements and grants to workforce training and financing. Each program has specific requirements, and our team is here to help you navigate them.

Hiring, Training & Retention

Workforce Development

Scaling a business means scaling your team. Medford's workforce partners offer hiring support, on-the-job training reimbursements, apprenticeship pipelines, and customized training programs — many at no cost to the employer.

🤝

Hiring & OJT Funding

Rogue Workforce Partnership offers on-the-job training (OJT) reimbursements up to 50% of wages, free job posting, applicant screening, and hiring events through WorkSource Rogue Valley.

🎓

Custom Training

Rogue Community College partners directly with employers to design training programs, apprenticeships, and upskilling courses in healthcare, trades, technology, and business.

📋

Tax Credits & Incentives

The WOTC federal tax credit provides up to $9,600/hire. Oregon Work Share helps retain trained staff during slow periods.

🏆

Nominate a Business for Recognition

Mayor's Business Spotlight

Recognizing Medford's Business Champions

Know a local business that's creating jobs, serving the community, or doing something remarkable in the Rogue Valley? Nominate them for a recognition visit from the Mayor, City Council Members, or City Manager.

Recognition visits celebrate your business's contribution to Medford's economic vitality — and they make for a great community moment. Nominations are reviewed monthly by the Economic Development Office.

🏛️
City Leadership Visit
Mayor · City Council
City Manager · Staff
Reviewed monthly
Nomination Form — Mayor's Business Spotlight

Nominations are sent to econdev@cityofmedford.org and reviewed monthly. All information is kept confidential.

Evaluating Medford for a new facility or relocation?

Available sites, cost comparisons, zoning data, fee estimates, and verified incentives — built for site selectors.

Explore Site Selector Tools →
Get in Touch

Talk to Our Team

Free, confidential assistance at every stage of your business journey. Tell us where you are and we'll connect you with the right resource.

🌱

Exploring Ideas

I'm researching, exploring options, and learning what it takes to start or relocate a business in Medford.

📋

Actively Planning

I have a business concept and I'm working on my plan, funding, location, or permits. I need specific guidance.

🚀

Ready to Launch or Expand

I have a plan and financing in motion. I need help with final steps, permits, incentive applications, or introductions.

🌱

Great Place to Start — We Have Tools for You

You're in the right place! Medford has a full ecosystem of free resources to help you move from idea to action. Before scheduling a meeting with our team, we recommend exploring these self-service tools — they'll answer most early-stage questions and help you arrive prepared when you're ready for a conversation.

🤖

MEDA — AI Business Agent

Ask questions 24/7 about permits, licensing, zoning, incentives, funding sources, and more. It's like having an economic development advisor available any time.

Open AI Assistant →

Business Launch Checklist

Step-by-step guide with costs, resources, and links for every stage — from business structure to your first hire.

View Checklist →
📊

Economic Data & Insights

Population, workforce, industry mix, cost comparisons — all the data you need to evaluate Medford.

Explore Data →
🔍

Incentive Finder

Answer 8 questions and get matched with incentive programs across local, state, federal, and regional sources.

Find Incentives →
🤝Free advising available now: Rogue SBDC offers free, confidential, one-on-one business advising — no appointment needed to get started. They're the best first step for early-stage entrepreneurs. sbdc.roguecc.edu →

Once you've explored these resources and have specific questions our tools can't answer, select "Actively Planning" or "Ready to Launch" above to connect with our team directly.

📋

Let's Get You to the Next Step

You're making progress — this is where our team can start adding real value. Send us your details below so we can research your specific situation before we connect. This helps us make the most of your time.

We respond within one business day. Your information is confidential.

👤

Economic Development Team

City of Medford, Oregon
📞 (541) 774-2007 econdev@cityofmedford.org
📍

Visit Us

City of Medford City Hall
411 W 8th Street, Medford, OR 97501
Mon–Fri · 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

🚀

You're Close — Let's Make It Happen

If you have a business plan, financing in progress, and specific questions about permits, incentives, or introductions — you're exactly who we want to talk to. Book a 15-minute introductory call with our team, and send us some background so we come prepared.

📅

Book Introductory Meeting with Warren Ng, Economic Development Director

City of Medford
Brief introductory meeting via Microsoft Teams. Pick a time that works for you.

Book a Time →

To make the most of your 15 minutes, please share some background below. This is optional but helps us research your situation before we meet.

WN

Warren Ng

Economic Development · City of Medford
📞 (541) 774-2007 econdev@cityofmedford.org
📍

Visit Us

City of Medford City Hall
411 W 8th Street, Medford, OR 97501
Mon–Fri · 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

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🔬 Medford Economic Data Explorer

Ask AI-powered questions about Medford and Jackson County economic data

⚠️ Important disclaimer: This tool provides directional insights only based on publicly available regional economic data. Responses are not financial, legal, or investment advice. Always validate information with original sources and consult qualified financial and legal professionals before making business decisions. We do not store or mine your queries for commercial purposes.

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