Oregon ATV Permit

You must display an ATV permit if you are operating your ATV on public land.

The ATV Permit Fee is $10.00  and is valid for two years.

Permit Purchase and renewal can be done by

Clicking Here

Building For Tomorrow - Support Your Local Trails


Your ATV Funds At Work

The ATV Grant Program provides funding statewide for off-highway vehicle (OHV) recreation. Grant funds come from ATV user permit sales and a percentage of gasoline tax money.  

ATV Grant funding helps pay for staffing, trail maintenance and reconstruction, maps, keeping restroom facilities clean and maintained, purchasing necessary materials and supplies to operate, educational patrols, signing and staging area maintenance, equipment, and any other items needed for operations.

"Adventure begins at the end of the roads you know"


Off-Road Safety 101
Off-Road Safety 101

It's important to be smart on the trail. We as off-road enthusiasts have a responsibility to uphold our image as respectable, safe, and proactive members within the OHV and surrounding communities. Set an example for others by following these off-road safety guidelines. Don't be afraid to speak up to those who may be making poor decisions along the trail. Together we can keep our public lands open and keep our relations with Land Management officials intact.

Read More


"Hardcore Off-roading with The Sketchy Oregon Boys in 4x4 Buggies at Never Ending Canyon"

When our friends from Oregon made a trip to Lake Tahoe recently, they asked for some recommendations on trails to wheel. They had been to the Rubicon and Fordyce, but were looking for more challenging options. These guys all have tube buggies and wear helmets when they go rockcrawling, to give you an idea of what they consider fun. We have wheeled with the Sketchy Oregon Boys before, and every trip we seem to end up with broken parts.

Read More

"Wheeling In Oregon Territory"

On local maps, Swartz Canyon shows up as a simple dirt road crossing the Ochoco Nation Forest near Prineville, Oregon. In fact, you could drive down the road and not even realize that there is some world-class rockcrawling hiding right under your nose. Fortunately we had the crew from G-Fab Motorsports and 4Locked Films of Bend, Oregon, to show us around the rocks of Swartz Canyon.

Read More

"We Do Hoodoo & End Up in Deep Doo-Doo"

Bend, Oregon, is a hotbed for microbreweries, Subarus, and rockcrawling. Rockcrawling?! It’s true. Areas like Cline Butte, Hoodoo, and Rim Butte offer a bevy of scenery and challenges for anything from a stock Jeep to a full rock buggy. On a recent trip to the area we met up with friends to explore the Santiam Pass OHV Area (commonly known as Hoodoo) in the Willamette National Forest.

Read More

"Rim Butte: Oregon’s Newest Hardcore Hot Spot

Bend, Oregon, is enjoying a resurgence as a tourist destination, and it’s easy to see why. Seemingly endless sunshine (eat your heart out, Portland), snow-covered mountains, and rivers that offer floating and fly fishing are abundant. Things were not always flourishing around central Oregon though. The area enjoyed a boom a century ago as timber from its forest was used to build cities up and down the west coast (and beyond). As interest rates climbed in the 1980s and the economy cooled, the sawmills closed and the boom turned into a bust as the area’s chief source of income was gone.

Read More