City still needs more than 300,000 new housing units by 2029 to meet Sacramento order

Housing development planning within the City of Los Angeles is 17.8 percent of a state-mandated goal that is now past its halfway mark – and local developers are disappointed but not surprised by the lag.
The comparison is based on data compiled for the Regional Housing Needs Assessment – also referred to as the “housing element” – ordered by the California Department of Housing and Community Development for all municipalities and other localities throughout California. It is a period cycle instituted by the state to spur residential development and construction.
The current cycle runs from Oct. 15, 2021 to Oct. 15, 2029 and calls for more than 456,000 new housing units to be planned in the City of Los Angeles over the eight-year period.
The city has issued permits for 81,306 housing units so far, as of the end of last year, per a preliminary report released Thursday by L.A. City Planning.
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Cityview CEO Sean Burton said it’s important to bear in mind the distinction between units permitted and what’s actually being built.
“There’s a lot of permits that have been issued, especially around ED-1, where people aren’t actually building anything because the finances don’t work,” Burton said. “Ultimately, we should care about how many units are built. No one can live in a permit.”
Excluding 2021 – since the majority of the year fell under the city’s previous housing cycle – there have been 67,385 housing units completed between the start of 2022 and the end of 2025, according to L.A. City Planning.
Another key hindrance to development is the city’s lengthy entitlement process, Burton and Lang both said. Burton pointed to one of Cityview’s projects on the Westside for nearly 500 multifamily units with 64 affordable units. This project was 100% privately financed but it still took them four years and 40 community meetings to get it entitled.
Because of all the headaches, Burton said that that development is Cityview’s only L.A. project right now, with its other resources going to projects in San Diego, Irvine, Walnut Creek, Culver City and El Segundo.
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Without “serious reforms” to ULA, along with other building policies and city processes, Burton said L.A. will continue to see less and less development, higher rents and increased homelessness. Additionally, he described a “cascading effect” surrounding attracting small- and medium-sized businesses based on high cost of living.
Read more: https://therealdeal.com/la/2026/04/03/los-angeles-at-17-8-of-housing-goal-clock-is-ticking/

