Oregon ODOT Cameras — Live Road Cameras & Map
All Oregon ODOT cameras — interactive statewide map
About this map
This map gathers the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) live road cameras into one fast, searchable view, pulled straight from the state's official TripCheck system. Oregon driving runs the gamut — fog and rain in the Willamette Valley, snow and chain-up zones on the Cascade passes, ice and ferocious east winds in the Columbia Gorge, and storm spray along the coast. The surest way to know what the road is doing is to look at it before you head out.
Coverage spans every corridor that matters. I‑5 forms the spine, running from Portland through Salem, Albany and Eugene to Roseburg, Grants Pass, Medford and over Siskiyou Summit — at 4,310 feet the highest point on I‑5 — to the California line. I‑84 heads east from Portland through the Columbia River Gorge past Hood River and The Dalles, then climbs Cabbage Hill (Deadman Pass) on its way to Pendleton, La Grande, Baker City and the Idaho border. US‑101 traces the entire coast, US‑26 crosses Mt. Hood at Government Camp, US‑97 carries Central Oregon through Bend, and US‑20, OR‑22 and OR‑58 climb the Santiam and Willamette passes.
Use the area presets to jump to a region, search for a highway or town, save the cameras you check most as favorites, and see nearby road‑weather stations alongside each feed. When the Gorge ices over, a Cascade pass goes to chains, or I‑5 fogs in at dawn, a quick camera check tells you what to expect.
Oregon regions covered
Tap an area chip on the map to jump straight to any of these regions.
Statewide
Every ODOT camera across Oregon in one view — I‑5 down the valley, I‑84 through the Gorge and into the high desert, US‑101 on the coast, and the Cascade passes between. The best at‑a‑glance read before any Oregon drive.
Portland Metro
Dense coverage of the metro freeways — I‑5 and I‑205, I‑84 east toward the Gorge, US‑26 (Sunset Highway) west and OR‑217 through the west side. Ideal for timing rush hour and spotting incidents before you commit to a route.
Willamette Valley
I‑5 cameras through Salem, Albany, Corvallis, Eugene and Springfield, plus OR‑22 and OR‑99. Flat, fast and fog‑prone — the valley's dawn fog and winter rain are the things to watch here.
Oregon Coast
US‑101 from Astoria and Seaside through Tillamook, Newport, Florence and Coos Bay to Brookings, plus the US‑26 and OR‑18 routes over the Coast Range. Wind, rain and the occasional landslide make the coast cameras worth a look in any storm.
Columbia Gorge
I‑84 and US‑30 from Troutdale through Cascade Locks, Hood River and The Dalles. The Gorge funnels brutal east winds and freezing rain in winter — these are some of the most important cameras in the state when ice moves in.
Central Oregon
US‑97 through Bend, Redmond and Madras, plus US‑20 and US‑26 over Santiam Pass and Mt. Hood at Government Camp — the gateway to the Cascade ski areas and the high‑desert routes east.
Southern Oregon
I‑5 through Roseburg, Grants Pass, Medford and Ashland over Siskiyou Summit, Sexton and Stage Pass, plus US‑97 and US‑199. High summits and the California‑bound truck run make the chain‑up zones here a frequent winter concern.
Eastern Oregon
I‑84 from Pendleton over Cabbage Hill (Deadman Pass) through La Grande and Baker City to Ontario, plus US‑395, US‑20 and US‑26. Open high desert that ices fast and blows snow — and Cabbage Hill is a notorious truck grade.
Tips for using Oregon road cameras
- Before any Cascade pass — Santiam (US‑20), Willamette (OR‑58), Government Camp (US‑26) or Siskiyou Summit (I‑5) — check the summit camera; ODOT posts traction‑tire and chain requirements there in winter, and conditions up top differ from the valley you're leaving.
- The Columbia Gorge (I‑84) is its own hazard: east winds drive freezing rain and ice, and the freeway closes for it. Scan the Hood River and The Dalles cameras before heading east in a cold snap.
- In the Willamette Valley, watch for dawn and evening fog on I‑5 — the cameras show visibility better than any forecast.
- A wet‑looking road near freezing usually means ice. Tap a camera's nearby weather station to pair the image with air and surface temperature before you go.
- Save your regular cameras as favorites — your Portland commute, a stretch of I‑5, or a pass you cross often — so they load with one tap.
- Cameras are a great real‑time gut check, but Oregon closes passes and the Gorge quickly — always confirm closures, chain laws and conditions with ODOT at TripCheck (tripcheck.com) or by dialing 511 in Oregon.
Live road cameras in other states
The same fast camera map for the other states we cover.