Guides

Multnomah CPPR sale, closure or move hard stop

A Multnomah County CPPR hard-stop guide for businesses that sold, closed, moved, or changed ownership.

By Yann LephayPublished · Last updated

Summary

A Multnomah CPPR case is not a routine renewal packet if the business sold, closed, moved, changed ownership, or disposed of all assets. Multnomah County has sale and closure workflows and requires specific dates, new-owner facts, asset disposition records and contact with the assessor when needed.

Sale, closure or move changes the CPPR filing lane.

Routine laneExisting business, existing accountRenewal-style asset packet.
Hard stopSold, closed, movedCounty workflow may be needed.
Key dateJanuary 1Business status on assessment date matters.

What Multnomah asks for

Multnomah guidance for sold or closed businesses points to sale or closure sections/forms, sale date, new-owner information, asset transfer or disposal details, and county contact when a regular return is not available.

Example

A business closed in December and assets were scrapped, but the owner still receives a CPPR notice. That is a closure/disposition record problem, not a normal renewal packet.

When to stop

Stop for business sale, closure, move, new owner, asset abandonment, asset transfer, lost account access, late filing, penalties, appeals or county correspondence.

Common questions

Can Business Property Desk handle a sold business?

No. Sale, closure, move and ownership-change workflows are outside scope.

What records should I collect anyway?

Collect sale date, closure date, new owner information, asset transfer list, disposal records, January 1 status and county account details.