Offices in San Francisco & Los Angeles

Offices in San Francisco & Los Angeles

Los Angeles County Property Tax Appeals Market Statistics

Los Angeles office property tax appeals are significantly affected by key metrics such as market vacancy and market rent. These recent trends are summarized below.

LOS ANGELES COUNTY OFFICE INVENTORY & VACANCY TRENDS - 2023 First Quarter

Vacancy % Total Available % Total Inventory SFAverage Asking Rent
Los Angeles Downtown22.6%30.1%33,627,619$3.73
West Los Angeles17.0%26.0%58,715,124$5.42
Total Class A22.2%30.0%158,580,479$4.16
Total Class B16.0%21.8%61,430,460$3.07
Total Greater Los Angeles Market20.0%27.5%238,628,318$3.85

Analysis By WPA 2023
Data By CBRE Market Research 2023

Cities and neighborhoods included in this market include Tri-Cities/Glendale, Downtown Los Angeles, East Downtown, Hollywood Wilshire Corridor, San Fernando Valley, San Gabriel Valley, Mid-Counties, South Bay, West Los Angeles including Beverly Hills, Culver City, Santa Monica, plus Ventura.

Los Angeles County retail building property tax appeals are significantly affected by key metrics such as market vacancy and market rent. These recent trends are summarized below.

GREATER LOS ANGELES COUNTY RETAIL INVENTORY & VACANCY TRENDS - 2022 Fourth Quarter

Vacancy % Total Available % Total Inventory SFAverage Asking NNN Rent
Antelope Valley5.96%6.11%8,136,430$1.56
Greater Downtown LA10.21%12.00%2,658,807$3.49
Mid-Cities4.14%4.20%12,308,795$2.37
Mid-Wilshire5.70%5.84%3,661,314$3.14
San Fernando Valley5.72%6.34%15,014,978$2.78
San Gabriel Valley5.23%5.39%20,703,457$2.46
Santa Clarita Valley5.27%5.34%5,905,323$2.54
South Bay3.59%3.63%20,150,801$2.72
South East Los Angeles5.00%5.00%7,269,313$2.05
Tri-Cities6.64%6.64%9,204,962$3.32
Ventura4.84%5.12%22,339,323$2.34
West Los Angeles11.47%12.55%5,320,161$5.80
Greater Los Angeles Retail Market5.36%5.61%132,673,664$2.77

Analysis By WPA 2023
Data By CBRE Market Research 2023

Some of the largest cities in the County of Los Angeles by population include: Los Angeles, Long Beach, Santa Clarita, Glendale, Lancaster, Palmdale, Pomona, Torrance, Pasadena, East Los Angeles, El Monte, Downey, Inglewood, West Covina, Norwalk, Burbank, Compton, South Gate, Carson, Santa Monica, Culver City, West Hollywood, and Beverly Hills.

Los Angeles County hotel property tax appeals are significantly affected by key metrics such as market vacancy and market rent. These trends are summarized below.

U.S. HOTELS - Hotel Key Performance Indicators - 2022 Year End

UNITED STATES DATATotalChange From 2019
Occupancy62.70%-4.90%
ADR$149.0013.6%
RevPAR$93.278.10%

Analysis By WPA 2023
Data By STR, TE, February 3, 2023 (Published), As of December 31, 2022
2022 Year End Indicators
* Uneven, non-linear recovery across industry segments.
* Overall construction pipeline activity is down. Some December 2022 growth in construction is seen.

Los Angeles County industrial property tax appeals are significantly affected by key metrics such as market vacancy and market rent. These trends are summarized below.

LOS ANGELES COUNTY INDUSTRIAL INVENTORY & VACANCY TRENDS - 2023 First Quarter

Vacancy % Total Available %Total Inventory SFAsking Rent Avg Mfg
Commerce/Vernon0.70%3.80%164,185,277$1.43
Downtown Los Angeles1.70%5.70%107,189,299$1.55
Mid-Counties0.50%2.10%112,864,743$1.74
Greater San Fernando Valley0.60%1.60%179,277,352$1.54
San Gabriel Valley1.30%2.70%161,255,902$1.71
South Bay0.80%3.50%221,055,548$1.95
Los Angeles County0.90%3.10%945,828,121$1.66

Analysis By WPA 2023
Data By CBRE Market Research 2023

Some of the largest cities in the County of Los Angeles by population include: Los Angeles, Long Beach, Santa Clarita, Glendale, Lancaster, Palmdale, Pomona, Torrance, Pasadena, East Los Angeles, El Monte, Downey, Inglewood, West Covina, Norwalk, Burbank, Compton, South Gate, Carson, Santa Monica, Culver City, West Hollywood, and Beverly Hills.

Los Angeles County multi-family property tax appeals are significantly affected by key metrics such as market vacancy and market rent. These trends are summarized below.

LOS ANGELES COUNTY MULTI-FAMILY INVENTORY & VACANCY TRENDS - 2022 Fourth Quarter

Vacancy %Total Inventory SFMarket Rent Avg. (/Unit)
Antelope Valley5.20%14,706$1,815
Brentwood/Westwood/Beverly Hills5.10%59,053$3,635
Burbank/Glendale/Pasadena3.80%105,548$2,918
Downtown Los Angeles6.10%47,275$2,952
East Los Angeles3.00%49,550$2,612
Hollywood4.50%91,912$2,956
Long Beach4.70%74,843$2,584
Mid-Wilshire3.90%119,560$3,036
North San Gabriel Valley4.10%30,206$2,234
Northridge/Northwest San Fernando Valley4.10%35,000$2,350
Palms/Mar Vista3.70%42,907$3,322
Santa Clarita Valley4.20%14,621$2,662
Santa Monica/Marina Del Rey3.80%47,273$3,835
Sherman Oaks/North Hollywood/Encino3.50%47,885$2,743
South Bay4.50%60,044$3,089
South Los Angeles2.80%132,036$2,418
South San Gabriel Valley3.10%10,956$2,304
Southeast Los Angeles3.60%38,496$2,307
Van Nuys/Northeast San Fernando Valley2.50%86,764$2,159
Woodland Hills4.30%20,834$2,744
Los Angeles County4.20%1,129,469$2,794
Antelope Valley5.20%14,706$1,815

Analysis By WPA 2023
Data By CBRE Market Research 2023

Some of the largest cities in the County of Los Angeles by population include: Los Angeles, Long Beach, Santa Clarita, Glendale, Lancaster, Palmdale, Pomona, Torrance, Pasadena, East Los Angeles, El Monte, Downey, Inglewood, West Covina, Norwalk, Burbank, Compton, South Gate, Carson, Santa Monica, Culver City, West Hollywood, and Beverly Hills.

Los Angeles is a major western metropolitan area, with the County bordered to the west by the Pacific Ocean, to the south by Orange County, to the north by Ventura and Kern Counties, and to the east by San Bernardino County.

Overall availabilities in the greater Los Angeles office market reached a staggering 30.0% (including both direct vacancy and sublease availabilities) in the first quarter for Class A space, yet exceeding the market-wide average availabilities for all office space of 27.5%. Class B office availabilities were lower at 21.8%. Absorption reached negative 1,277,645 SF for the quarter alone. The total market inventory is 238,628,318 square feet.

Downtown Los Angeles direct vacancy rate was 22.6% with an overall availability of 30.1% and accounted for 384,614 SF of the negative net absorption in the quarter. As high as this may seem, occupancy was yet lower in East Downtown with more than half of all office space as vacant or available, showing availabilities of 54.7% and direct vacancy of 48.7%.

Faring better than the downtown, the West Los Angeles office market experienced direct vacancy of only 17.0%, though even in this market the overall availabilities reached 26.0%. Negative absorption tallied to 156,881 square feet. Nearby, the South Bay market reached 29.5% in availabilities and accounted for a massive 749,892 square feet of negative absorption.

Following the first quarter, the City of Los Angeles experienced effectively a near freeze in property sales over $5 million, as new onerous transfer taxes in these cities took effect on April 1, 2023. For the stated purpose of funding solutions to the growing homeless population, voters approved a November 2022 Proposition ULA in the City of Los Angeles. Marketed to the public under the misnomer of “Mansion Tax,” the additional transfer tax applies to all property selling in excess of $5 million, with yet a higher transfer tax for sales exceeding $10 million. This transfer tax applies to the entire sale price, regardless of prior acquisition price or presence of mortgage debt in place. The result was a spike in sales prior to April 1, 2023 and a steep decline in sales over $5 million after that date. As the outcome of litigation to overturn this new measure is eagerly awaited by the entire real estate community, would be sellers of assets over the $5 million threshold have almost universally sought to hold. The City of Santa Monica passed a similar version of this tax, Measure GS, which took effect as of March 1, 2023, applying to sales over $8 million, resulting in similar legal challenges and a drop-off in property sales. These taxes, and its variations, serve as the latest proof of the old adage that when you tax something you get less of it.

Overall, trends countywide are of vacancy rising to levels rarely seen, and absorption running negative or close to it in all sub-markets. Work from home trends, rising interest rates, and economic adjustments are showing their effects.

Los Angeles County office building of approximately 150,000 square feet
Appealed by the professionals of WPA

New construction Hollywood tourist attraction
Appealed by the professionals of WPA

Thank you for considering us
for your tax appeal needs.

Daniel Glasser, MAI

Director, Valuation Services
[email protected]

Northern California:

Southern California: