The LA STR Market: What Hosts Need to Know in 2025

Permit enforcement is tighter, seasonal swings are wider, and the hosts making money know exactly which 90 days matter most.

Los Angeles isn’t one short-term rental market—it’s a dozen microclimates with wildly different performance profiles. And in 2025, the gap between hosts who understand their neighborhood’s data and those winging it has never been wider.

The Numbers That Matter

The average LA short-term rental is running 62% occupancy with an ADR around $285. That sounds decent until you realize top-performing listings in Venice and Silver Lake are clearing 78% occupancy at $340+ per night, while inland properties in Eagle Rock or Highland Park often sit at 51% with lower nightly rates.

The difference? Precision around peak seasons and realistic pricing during shoulder periods.

LA’s revenue isn’t evenly distributed. Roughly 35% of annual income concentrates in three windows: late spring (May-June), summer (July-August), and year-end holidays. Hosts who optimize for these 90 days and accept strategic occupancy dips in February and November consistently outperform those chasing every booking.

What Changed in 2025

Permit enforcement got real. The city isn’t just threatening—it’s issuing fines and forcing delistings. As of early 2025, only about 18,000 active permits exist for a city that previously had over 30,000 listings. The hosts who survived are the ones who got compliant early or hired management that understood the process.

Neighborhood performance also stratified. Coastal properties (Venice, Santa Monica, Manhattan Beach) remain strong thanks to proximity premium. But mid-city neighborhoods like Los Feliz, Echo Park, and parts of Koreatown saw ADR gains of 8-12% as travelers hunt for walkable, cultural experiences at better price points than the beach.

Downtown LA? Still struggling. Convention-dependent properties haven’t recovered to pre-2020 performance, with occupancy rates stuck around 48%.

Where the Opportunity Is

If you own in LA and aren’t hitting 70%+ occupancy, you’ve got a revenue gap—and it’s almost always one of three things:

Pricing: Most hosts either overcharge in low season (killing occupancy) or undercharge in May and December (leaving $8K–$15K on the table annually).

Permits: Unlisted or non-compliant properties are getting pulled. Get legal or get out.

Positioning: Cookie-cutter listings don’t convert anymore. LA travelers want neighborhood stories—Silver Lake creative vibes, Venice bohemian energy, Pasadena historic charm. Generic descriptions get scrolled past.

The hosts winning in LA right now are the ones treating their property like a small business: compliant, data-informed, and hyper-aware of what drives bookings in their specific zip code.

Want to See Your Property’s Revenue Gap?

We’ll pull your neighborhood’s performance data and show you exactly where you’re leaving money on the table—no pressure, just numbers.

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