Summary
The Los Angeles housing shortage persists, but Q1 2026 saw measurable market rent relief from new multifamily supply, as well as a polarizing local policy decision on state density reform. Asking rents fell to four-year lows as completions outpaced absorption. The LA City Council chose the least aggressive option for implementing SB 79, delaying full compliance until 2030. A proposed rewrite of Measure ULA stalled in January after the Council declined to place it on the June ballot, and a statewide initiative that could eliminate high local transfer taxes has since qualified for the November 2026 ballot. Tariff-driven construction cost increases and continued permitting weakness add further pressure.
When LA adds housing, rents stabilize or fall. But the city permitted only 8,714 units in 2025 (per Hilgard Analytics), roughly 16% of the ~57,000 needed annually to meet the RHNA target of 456,000 units for 2021–2029.
Housing Market Snapshot
California’s home prices remain elevated relative to the rest of the country (median sales price for the US: $436k; median sales price for California: $854k). Within Los Angeles:
- Median rents decline 3%+ – Median monthly asking rents in LA County dropped to $2,520 in Q1 2026, a 3.7% year-over-year decline (down $97), per the Realtor.com Q1 2026 LA Rental Report. City of LA rents hit $2,682 (down 3.5%). Small units (0–2 bed) fell 5.7% to $2,241. A typical rental still requires household income above $107,000, ~20% above the city’s median of $88,730.
- Apartment vacancy rate increased to 5.6% – Multifamily vacancy rose to 5.6% as 2,300 units delivered against 1,100 absorbed, per the Matthews Q1 2026 LA Multifamily Report.
- Sale prices declined 1.1% – Median home sale prices declined modestly, down 1.1% to $910,000 in March per Homes.com. Inventory is healthy at 4.6 months of supply (healthy target: 4 to 6).
Policy & Permitting Updates
City Council Limits SB 79 Implementation
On March 24, the City Council voted to adopt Option C1, the least aggressive of three paths for responding to SB 79. The city expanded its Corridor Transition program to allow 2–4 story multifamily (4–16 units) near 55 transit hubs, while excluding HPOZs (historic preservation overlay zones). This delays full statewide density requirements until the 2030 Housing Element cycle. Pro-housing groups criticized the decision; critics in public comment noted that no housing has been built under the existing Corridor Transition program and that even with this program expansion, it does not offer generous enough incentives to cover the cost of the amount of affordable housing required by law.
Measure ULA: Reform Stalls, Statewide Threat Grows
On January 24, Councilmember Nithya Raman introduced a motion to place ULA amendments on the June ballot, including a 15-year exemption for new multifamily construction and relief for fire victims. The Council declined to fast-track it on January 27, referring it to committee. ULA remains unchanged. Since April 2023 it has collected over $1 billion, but only ~$913,000 of $188 million in affordable housing funds has gone to new multifamily construction. A Howard Jarvis–backed statewide initiative has qualified for the November 2026 ballot and would effectively eliminate ULA and similar taxes in 26 California cities if passed. A competing legislative measure (ACA 13), if passed, would require the Howard Jarvis initiative to clear a two-thirds threshold rather than a simple majority.
Affordable Housing Pipeline
The Mayor’s office reported over 40,000 affordable units in the pipeline with 6,000+ under construction, attributed to Executive Directive 1 (now codified). These are self-reported figures; independent verification has not been released. A 53-unit veterans housing project near the West Los Angeles VA was highlighted during Q1.
RSO, Permitting & Construction Costs
The revised Rent Stabilization Ordinance took effect February 1, setting annual increases at 90% of CPI (1% floor, 4% ceiling), down from 100% of CPI (3–8%). Permitting remained weak: 2025’s 8,714 units permitted stayed far below the 2015–2022 average of ~13,000. Federal tariffs have added an estimated 8–15% to overall construction costs since early 2024, with Canadian lumber tariffs adding 8–15% to framing and metal tariffs adding 10–20% to structural components. LA’s construction costs jumped 5.9% in 2024, the highest annual increase in California, and further increases are expected as wildfire rebuild demand competes with new construction for labor and materials.
Fire Rebuild Update
As of early 2026, more than 2,600 rebuilding permits had been issued across the Palisades and Altadena, roughly one in five of the ~13,000 homes lost. Over 340 projects had started construction. Local governments issued permits approximately three times faster than pre-fire averages, largely due to emergency executive orders that waived certain reviews and created like-for-like rebuild pathways. But permits are not completed homes. Contractors and architects working on rebuilds have noted that cost uncertainty from insurance gaps, wildland-urban boundary requirements, and tariff-affected materials is causing some homeowners to delay or abandon plans even after obtaining permits.
The Path Forward
Q1 2026 confirmed that new supply brings rent relief. But the Council’s minimal SB 79 implementation delays transit-oriented density until at least 2030. The ULA reform effort collapsed in January, leaving the tax’s effect on multifamily investment unresolved ahead of a statewide ballot fight this November. Permitting is stuck at one-sixth of what RHNA requires, and tariff-driven cost increases are worsening already-difficult project economics. On the positive side, the affordable pipeline is growing, the RSO overhaul provides clearer rules for rent-stabilized units, and the adaptive reuse expansion from Q4 2025 is opening conversion opportunities citywide. Closing the gap between what LA zones for and what it actually permits and builds will require sustained attention to permitting reform, construction costs, and developer certainty.
Christopher Russell - Strategic Communications, Yimby LA
Samuel Maury-Holmes - Founder, Zenith Economics