DEQ FAILURE GUIDE

Failed Oregon DEQ? Decide Whether to Repair or Sell the Car

A Portland and Medford-area guide to failed emissions tests, free retests, repair assistance, and deciding when to sell.

8 min readUpdated July 12, 2026

A failed emissions test can turn an ordinary registration renewal into a repair decision. Oregon's vehicle testing program applies within defined Portland and Medford boundaries, not everywhere in the state.

Before selling, understand why the vehicle failed, what assistance exists, and whether the likely repair is reasonable compared with the car's value.

QUICK ANSWER

Use the DEQ Fail Form to diagnose the issue, get a repair estimate, and compare the full repair cost with the car's reliable market value and a cash offer. Oregon offers free retests, but failing vehicles generally must be fully repaired to pass.

01

First confirm whether testing applies

Within Portland testing boundaries, most gasoline, alternative-fuel, hybrid, and light-duty diesel vehicles from model year 1975 onward must test, subject to exemptions. In the Medford area, covered vehicles generally are 20 years old or newer, also subject to exemptions.

Fully electric vehicles and several other categories are exempt. Use the DEQ boundary and exemption tools rather than assuming the rule from a city name alone.

02

Read the failure before approving repairs

The DEQ Fail Form explains the result. DEQ offers free retests and maintains a Portland-area list of recognized repair shops, but it does not recommend a specific repair or business.

Most OBD vehicles will not pass with the check-engine light on. A recently cleared computer can also show an unready status, so ask the mechanic when the monitors will be ready for retesting.

03

Check assistance before giving up

The Clean Air Partners Program may help qualifying low-income Portland-area residents with certain minor emissions repairs on 1996-or-newer vehicles that failed an OBD test. Funding and eligibility can change, so verify directly with DEQ.

Oregon does not use a simple spend-a-fixed-amount waiver for a still-failing vehicle. DEQ explains that the vehicle must be repaired enough to pass.

04

Use a three-number decision

Collect three numbers: the realistic repair total, the car's value after a successful repair, and an as-is cash offer. Include diagnostic charges, towing, registration delay, and the risk of another issue after the emissions repair.

Selling may make sense when the repair consumes most of the dependable post-repair value, especially on a high-mileage vehicle with additional safety or mechanical problems. Disclose that the car failed and keep the title paperwork accurate.

PRACTICAL CHECKLIST

DEQ repair-or-sell checklist

  • Confirm the vehicle is inside a testing boundary
  • Read every code on the Fail Form
  • Ask for a written repair estimate
  • Check Clean Air Partners eligibility
  • Compare repair cost, repaired value, and as-is offer
  • Disclose known problems to the buyer

OFFICIAL SOURCES

Rules, forms, fees, and program eligibility can change. Use these primary sources to confirm your situation.

This article provides general educational information, not legal, tax, or financial advice. Contact Oregon DMV, DEQ, a lienholder, or a qualified professional for advice about your facts.

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SELLING THE CAR AS-IS?

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