Los Angeles is one of America’s most expensive housing markets. The median home price in LA County is approximately $900,000 , requiring a household income of $200,000+ to afford comfortably using traditional guidelines.
Here’s a realistic breakdown of what you need to buy in LA β by neighborhood, price point, and income level.
Table of Contents
Quick Answer: Income Needed by Area
Area
Median Price
Income Needed
Down Payment (20%)
West LA (Westside)
$1,500,000+
$350,000+
$300,000+
Santa Monica
$2,000,000
$450,000+
$400,000
Pasadena
$1,100,000
$250,000
$220,000
Long Beach
$800,000
$180,000
$160,000
Glendale
$1,000,000
$225,000
$200,000
San Fernando Valley
$850,000
$190,000
$170,000
South LA
$600,000
$135,000
$120,000
Antelope Valley
$475,000
$110,000
$95,000
2026 estimates. Single-family homes; condos typically 20-40% less.
The Math: Affording an LA Home
Cost Component
Amount
Purchase price
$900,000
Down payment (20%)
$180,000
Mortgage amount
$720,000
Mortgage payment (6.5% rate, 30yr)
$4,550
Property taxes (1.1%)
$825
Homeowners insurance
$300
HOA (if applicable)
$400
Total monthly housing
$6,075
Income Needed
Affordability Rule
Required Income
28% front-end ratio
$260,000/year
36% debt-to-income
$202,000/year
3x income rule
$300,000/year
Practical minimum
$200,000/year
To afford the median LA home, you need approximately $200,000 household income with 20% down and minimal other debt.
What Can You Afford at Each Income Level?
Household Income
Max Home Price
Where You Can Buy
$100,000
$350,000
Condos in outer areas, Antelope Valley
$125,000
$450,000
Lancaster, Palmdale, far Valley edges
$150,000
$550,000
South LA, parts of Long Beach
$175,000
$650,000
San Pedro, Lomita, outer Valley
$200,000
$725,000
Mid-Valley, East LA, Inglewood
$250,000
$900,000
Much of Valley, Long Beach, decent areas
$300,000
$1,100,000
Pasadena, better neighborhoods
$400,000+
$1,400,000+
Westside adjacent, prime areas
LA Neighborhood Price Comparison
Expensive (Very High Income Required)
Neighborhood
Median Price
Income Needed
Beverly Hills
$3,500,000+
$800,000+
Pacific Palisades
$3,000,000+
$700,000+
Santa Monica
$2,000,000
$450,000
Manhattan Beach
$2,800,000
$650,000
Malibu
$3,200,000+
$750,000+
Mid-Range (High Income)
Neighborhood
Median Price
Income Needed
Pasadena
$1,100,000
$250,000
Sherman Oaks
$1,100,000
$250,000
Encino
$1,300,000
$300,000
Culver City
$1,200,000
$275,000
Burbank
$1,000,000
$225,000
More Affordable Options
Neighborhood
Median Price
Income Needed
Long Beach (east)
$700,000
$160,000
Inglewood
$750,000
$170,000
Compton
$550,000
$125,000
Reseda
$750,000
$170,000
North Hollywood
$850,000
$190,000
San Pedro
$700,000
$160,000
Budget Options (Still LA County)
Area
Median Price
Income Needed
Palmdale
$475,000
$110,000
Lancaster
$450,000
$100,000
Victorville*
$400,000
$90,000
*San Bernardino County but LA commutable
Down Payment Reality in LA
Down Payment
On $900K Home
Monthly Payment
Notes
5%
$45,000
$6,200 + PMI
Limited loan options
10%
$90,000
$5,800 + PMI
Common for first-timers
20%
$180,000
$5,200
Standard target
25%
$225,000
$4,850
Stronger offers
30%
$270,000
$4,500
Competitive in bidding wars
LA Reality: Homes frequently sell over asking price. A larger down payment makes your offer more competitive.
Additional LA Buying Costs
Cost
Amount
Notes
Closing costs
$25,000-$40,000
2.5-4% of purchase price
Transfer tax (~$1.10/$1,000)
$990
County transfer tax
City transfer tax (LA City)
~$4,050
0.45% in LA city limits
Title insurance
$3,000-$5,000
Required
Escrow fees
$2,000-$3,000
Split buyer/seller
Home inspection
$400-$600
Essential
Total extra costs
$35,000-$50,000
On median home
Total upfront for $900K home: $215,000-$230,000 (down payment + closing costs).
Condo vs. Single-Family Economics
Factor
Condo
Single-Family
Typical price (same area)
30-40% less
Full price
Monthly HOA
$350-$700
$0 (or Mello-Roos)
Maintenance
Lower
Your responsibility
Appreciation (historical)
4-5%/year
5-6%/year
Insurance
Lower
Higher
Example comparison (same neighborhood):
Feature
Condo ($650K)
Single-Family ($950K)
Down payment (20%)
$130,000
$190,000
Monthly mortgage
$3,280
$4,800
HOA
$500
$0
Property taxes
$600
$870
Total monthly
$4,380
$5,670
Monthly Budget on $200K Income with $750K Home
Category
Amount
% of Take-Home
Mortgage + insurance + taxes
$5,000
38%
HOA (if applicable)
$350
3%
Utilities
$250
2%
Transportation
$600
4%
Groceries
$800
6%
Home maintenance
$400
3%
Savings/retirement
$1,800
13%
Healthcare
$500
4%
Discretionary
$1,800
13%
Take-home ~$13,500
Remaining: $2,000
15%
Assumes CA + federal taxes on $200K household income
Alternatives: Commuter Cities
City
Distance to DTLA
Median Price
Income Needed
Ontario
40 mi
$575,000
$130,000
Riverside
55 mi
$550,000
$125,000
Corona
50 mi
$650,000
$145,000
Rancho Cucamonga
45 mi
$675,000
$150,000
Irvine (OC)
45 mi
$1,100,000
$250,000
Anaheim
30 mi
$800,000
$180,000
The Inland Empire offers significantly lower prices, but commutes can be 1-2 hours each way.
California First-Time Buyer Programs
Program
Benefit
Requirements
CalHFA MyHome
3.5% down payment assistance
Income limits, 1st-time buyer
CalHFA ZIP
Additional closing cost help
Combined with MyHome
GSFA Platinum
Up to 5% down payment grant
Income/price limits
FHA Loans
3.5% down
Credit 580+, loan limits
VA Loans
0% down
Veterans/active military
California’s high conforming loan limit ($1,089,300 in LA County) helps more buyers qualify for conventional loans.
LA Housing Challenges to Know
Challenge
Impact
Bidding wars
Expect to pay 5-10% over asking
Low inventory
Fewer choices, fast decisions needed
High property taxes
1.1-1.25% annually
Mello-Roos
Extra tax in newer developments
Fire insurance
Difficult/expensive in hillside areas
Earthquake retrofitting
Older homes may need work
Key Takeaways
Median LA home: $900,000 β you need ~$200,000+ income
Westside is hardest β $350,000+ income for most homes
Budget $215,000+ upfront β down payment + closing costs
Condos save 30-40% β good alternative for first-timers
Inland Empire commute β saves $300-400K on home price
First-time buyer programs β can help with down payments
Multiple offers common β be prepared to compete
Written by
WealthVieu
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