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Moving to Oregon as a trans person

Oregon is one of the most trans-affirming states in the country, OHP covers gender-affirming care as a legal right, name and gender marker changes require no surgery and no physician letter, and Portland has a deep trans community. This path walks you through the move from financial preparation through your first month on the ground. Based on 80+ successful WERQ TOGETHER relocations.

Step 1

Build your financial floor first

Before booking anything

The moves that work have a financial floor. The number WERQ TOGETHER has seen hold across 80+ relocations is $3,000. Enough to cover move costs, first-month housing, and an emergency buffer while you wait for your first paycheck.

If you don't have $3,000 yet, fundraise before you book anything. Crowdfunding works best when you tell your own story in your own voice. A GoFundMe or community chip-in with a specific goal and a specific reason tends to move faster than a vague appeal.

Trans-specific emergency funds if you need a boost:

  • Trans Lifeline Microgrants (translifeline.org/microgrants)
  • Point of Pride Emergency Fund (pointofpride.org)
  • Mutual aid networks in your current city (search "[your city] trans mutual aid")

Moving without this floor puts you in a not-fun mode. It's harder to hear, but waiting until you have resources dramatically changes outcomes.

Step 2

Secure housing before you travel, not leads, actual confirmed housing

This must be confirmed before travel

This is the biggest gate on the whole path: do not travel until you have housing confirmed. "Some leads" and "I'll figure it out when I get there" are how moves fail within 60 days.

Confirmed housing means: signed lease, accepted shared-house offer, or confirmed temporary housing with a clear path to permanent.

If you have evictions, a criminal record, low credit, or low income:

  • Rent Well (503-515-1328, rentwell.org), 15-hour course; graduates qualify for up to $5,000 landlord guarantee
  • JOIN PDX (503-232-2031), 500+ landlord network, low-barrier for people with evictions, records, or immigration status concerns
  • Our Just Future: affordable housing in East Portland, serves women, genderqueer, and nonbinary people
  • Housing Connector: reduced screening criteria, 3 months rent support

Trans-friendly shared housing:

  • Portland Bremen House, queer housing cooperative, ~$650/month
  • FurnishedFinder, HomeShare, PadSplit, remote search options

Can't tour in person? Find a Portland-based contact, community member, or WERQ navigator to tour for you. Don't sign a 12-month lease you haven't seen in person or by proxy.

🏳️‍⚧️ If you're being housed by a host through Safe Haven (WERQ TOGETHER's home share program), your navigator will coordinate this step with you.

Step 3

Line up employment before you travel

Before travel

Like housing, employment needs to be lined up before you go, not "I'll apply when I land." That approach works occasionally; it fails often enough to be a real risk.

Employment lined up means: offer in hand, active interview pipeline with a scheduled next step, or confirmed that your current remote work continues.

Oregon employment resources (you can start these before you move):

  • WorkSource Portland Metro <<< BIG JOB DATABASE, free career coaching, resume help, job placement; 5 locations you can connect with remotely first
  • Outside In Employment Resource Center (503-535-3860), trans-affirming, for adults too despite the youth reputation
  • Dress for Success Oregon: professional attire, mentorship, gender-expansive

If documents are blocking employment: CLEAR Clinic (clear-clinic.org) does zero-fee name and gender marker changes with Friday drop-in. Outside In's ID Project also helps with fee waivers. You can start this process before arriving.

Step 4

Sort your documents and healthcare transition

4 to 8 weeks before travel

Oregon's document advantages: self-attestation for gender marker changes, no surgery requirement, no public notice, X gender marker available. You can do most of this after you arrive, but starting the process early helps.

Free legal help with name and gender marker changes:

  • CLEAR Clinic: Fridays, noon drop-in (clear-clinic.org)
  • Outside In ID Project: fee waivers, for all ages
  • ACLU Oregon: discrimination and complex cases

Healthcare transition:

🏳️‍⚧️ Oregon is one of the few states where your legal documents, ID, birth certificate, court order, can all be updated with self-attestation and no physician sign-off. Plan to do this early once you land.

*** ATTACH THE OJD GUIDE AND FILE LINK SO FOLKS CAN DIRECTLY APPLY FROM HERE

Step 5

Get your logistics in order

2 to 4 weeks before travel

Transport: own vehicle, sell and fly, U-Haul, PODS, figure out which makes sense for what you're bringing.

Pets: Consider registering your animals as emotional support animals. Talk to your therapist about it. ESA letters can help waive pet deposits and pet rent.

Banking: OnPoint Community Credit Union and Unitus Community Credit Union are trans-friendly Oregon banks you can often open accounts with before arriving.

Arrival plan: know how you're getting from the airport or wherever you land to your housing. Have first-night essentials in your carry-on or most accessible bag, meds, chargers, toiletries, one change of clothes.

Furniture: don't ship furniture if you can avoid it. Portland has excellent free and low-cost sources once you're here: Community Warehouse (free, requires a referral), Buy Nothing PDX groups, Radical Abundance (trans-led thrift, no one turned away for lack of funds).

Want the full move-day playbook? This is the short version. For the step-by-step path covering transport, furniture, pets, banking, mail, and your first night, follow Get yourself and your stuff to Oregon.

Step 6

Your first-week priorities

Week 1

In your first week, hit these in order:

  1. Apply for OHP: one.oregon.gov or call 1-800-699-9075. Takes 30 to 45 days to activate, so apply immediately. Some providers will see you while you wait.
  2. Apply for SNAP: food benefits, apply at the same time as OHP via the ONE portal. If your income is very low, you may qualify for emergency SNAP in 7 days.
  3. Open a bank account if you haven't yet, OnPoint or Unitus can usually do this same-week.
  4. Connect with your first community thread: Q Center (503-234-7837), Trans Town PDX network, or local Signal/Facebook groups for trans Portlanders

Material needs: Rose Haven (1740 NW Glisan) has meals, clothing, showers, and gender-affirming supplies with no ID required. Oregon Food Bank has 1,200+ partner sites with no documentation needed.

💡 WERQ TOGETHER navigators can help coordinate your first week if you're connected to our network. Reach out at werqt.org.

Step 7

The 30/60/90, how stability actually builds

30 / 60 / 90 days post-arrival

Most moves that work settle into a rhythm by 90 days. Here's what that looks like:

At 30 days: first rent paid on time, OHP submitted, one named person or community thread in Portland that's yours. Even if things are hard, one named connection means you're not alone.

At 60 days: landlord or roommate relationship is functional, healthcare is connected (PCP or first appointment scheduled), finances are stabilizing.

At 90 days: you can name 2 to 3 people in Portland who are yours, not from before you moved, not your support network from afar. Local people. That's the signal that the move worked.

If things go sideways: call 211 (24/7, free, housing and crisis referrals). Contact WERQ TOGETHER at werqt.org. Trans Lifeline (1-877-565-8860) for peer support anytime.

🏳️‍⚧️ Moving is hard. It usually takes longer to feel like home than you expect. The people who succeed are usually the ones who asked for help instead of waiting until things were critical.

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