Largest community colleges in Oregon

Community colleges in Oregon ranked by total student enrollment, largest first. Bigger institutions generally offer broader program catalogs, more sections per term, more transfer agreements, and deeper student-services staffing — but smaller colleges often win on advisor attention, classroom intimacy, and faculty access.

  1. Portland Community CollegePortland, OR19,531
  2. Chemeketa Community CollegeSalem, OR6,610
  3. Lane Community CollegeEugene, OR6,064
  4. Linn-Benton Community CollegeAlbany, OR5,174
  5. Clackamas Community CollegeOregon City, OR4,963
  6. Mt Hood Community CollegeGresham, OR3,856
  7. Central Oregon Community CollegeBend, OR3,789
  8. Rogue Community CollegeGrants Pass, OR3,559
  9. Southwestern Oregon Community CollegeCoos Bay, OR1,270
  10. Blue Mountain Community CollegePendleton, OR962
  11. Columbia Gorge Community CollegeThe Dalles, OR543
  12. Clatsop Community CollegeAstoria, OR493
  13. Oregon Coast Community CollegeNewport, OR376
  14. Tillamook Bay Community CollegeTillamook, OR294

Why size matters

Enrollment scale shapes nearly every aspect of the student experience at a community college. The largest Oregon community colleges typically offer multiple sections of every general-education course, robust evening and weekend schedules for working students, full-service career centers and transfer advising offices, and deep portfolios of articulation agreements with four-year institutions across Oregon and beyond. They also tend to operate multiple campuses or learning centers, which can put a community college within commuting distance of more residents.

Smaller community colleges in Oregon compete on attention. Smaller cohorts mean a single academic advisor sees you across multiple semesters and can write a substantive recommendation when you transfer or apply for a job. Faculty teach more sections of fewer courses, which means the same instructor often guides you through a sequence rather than handing you off term to term. For students who thrive on relationship and continuity, the smaller institutions on this list can be the better choice even when the larger one offers more programs.

Use this list alongside the state's transfer-outcomes guide and the state's cost-and-aid guide. Together they let you triangulate fit on the three dimensions that matter most for community-college choice: program availability, total cost after aid, and how reliably the institution moves students on to the next step.