PORTLAND ACCIDENT SERVICES · BEAVERTON
Accident report retrieval in Beaverton
If you were in a crash anywhere in Beaverton — from the Cedar Hills area to downtown and out along Canyon Road — we pull your official report for free and deliver it within the hour.
- No cost to you
- Delivered within 1 hour
- No pushy attorney calls
Need help now? Call us: (503) 217-2733 · Available 24/7
Getting your accident report in Beaverton
Beaverton is the second-largest city in the Portland metro area and one of the busiest daily-commute hubs in Oregon. Between Oregon 217 running through the middle of the city, US-26 (Sunset Highway) along the northern edge, and the dense grid of commercial corridors like Canyon Road, Murray Boulevard, and the Tualatin Valley Highway, Beaverton Police handle thousands of accident reports every year. If you were in one of them, the report is what every insurer, attorney, and medical provider will ask for — and you should not be sitting in a lobby waiting for a copy.
How reports are filed in Beaverton
Beaverton is served by the Beaverton Police Department (BPD), a separate agency from Portland Police. If your accident happened inside Beaverton city limits, BPD generated your report. Reports are filed through the BPD Records Unit and are typically available 5 to 10 business days after the responding officer files. For crashes just outside the city line — common on 217 or along TV Highway — the Washington County Sheriff's Office or Oregon State Police may have responded instead. For minor property-damage-only crashes that BPD did not dispatch to, Oregon requires you to file an accident report with the Oregon DMV within 72 hours if anyone was injured, a vehicle was towed, or damage was more than $2,500.
Where Beaverton accidents happen
Four corridors account for most of the Beaverton accident reports we retrieve. Oregon 217 through Beaverton — between the US-26 junction at the north end and the I-5 junction at the south — is one of the most crash-prone freeway segments in Oregon, with the majority being rear-end collisions in the heavy commuter traffic between the Allen and Scholls Ferry exits. US-26 (Sunset Highway) from the Sylvan exit east toward downtown Portland sees frequent merge-zone and lane-change crashes, especially in the westbound afternoon commute. Canyon Road and Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway together form the main surface arterial into Portland and produce a recurring pattern of angle collisions. Finally, Tualatin Valley Highway (TV Hwy) from downtown Beaverton west toward Aloha and Hillsboro sees consistent rear-end and left-turn crashes at the larger intersections.
Medical care near Beaverton
Providence St. Vincent Medical Center off Barnes Road is the primary ER destination for Beaverton crashes — a large hospital that receives most serious injuries from 217 and US-26 corridor accidents. For less-acute cases, Kaiser Permanente has a Westside Medical Center with an emergency department nearby. OHSU and Legacy Emanuel in Portland are the Level I trauma destinations for high-acuity cases. Keep every discharge paper, imaging bill, and follow-up appointment note — contemporaneous medical records are the single strongest piece of evidence if an injury claim follows.
Whatever happened and wherever in Beaverton it happened, we handle the records work for you. Fill out the form below and your report lands in your inbox within the hour during business hours. No fees. No strings. No attorney calls unless you want them.
How it works
Tell us
A few details about your accident. Takes 2 minutes.
We retrieve
Official report pulled from the police records office.
Delivered
Emailed securely. Optional attorney referral.
Common questions
Which police department handles Beaverton accidents?
Beaverton Police Department (BPD) handles crashes inside city limits. Washington County Sheriff's Office handles unincorporated areas. Oregon State Police covers freeway mainline. We figure out jurisdiction from your details.
How long does BPD take to release a report?
Typically 5-10 business days after the officer files. Once released to records, our service retrieves and emails it to you within 1-2 hours during business hours.
What if my crash was on Highway 217 — city or state?
Oregon State Police usually handles crashes on 217 mainline. If OSP responded, we pull from OSP records. If BPD or the county sheriff responded (common near the interchanges), we pull from whichever agency filed the report.
Is there a fee?
No. The service is free to the victim. BPD's release fee is covered by us. Optional attorney referral is also free — the attorney pays us if you sign with them, not you.
Do you also serve Aloha, Cedar Mill, and Raleigh Hills?
Yes. Those unincorporated areas are typically handled by Washington County Sheriff's Office, and we retrieve reports from WCSO the same way we retrieve from BPD.