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.

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.

πŸ”’
See the full breakdown: How much house can I afford?

The Math: Affording an LA Home

For a $900,000 Home (LA County Median)

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

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer Β· Editorial policy