Price-per-sqft trends, days on market, drop-depth distribution, and tier breakdowns for Los Angeles.
This page tracks the Los Angeles luxury property market in real time using live listing data from Zillow, refreshed daily. The dataset captures the actual movement of asking prices: how many listings reduce their price, by how much, in which neighborhoods, and how quickly. Unlike a quarterly Westside MLS report, this view shows where the market is moving this week, neighborhood by neighborhood.
LA luxury is in a structurally distinct cycle in 2024–2026. The 2021 mansion-tax-prep flurry and the 2022–2023 rate shock bifurcated the market: ultra-prime trophy properties trade infrequently but at strong values; mid-luxury ($3–10M) has the most active drop volume as second-home owners and trade-up sellers adjust to higher carrying costs. The 4% LA Measure ULA mansion tax on $5M+ sales has materially changed seller behavior — listings just above $5M tend to either price aggressively below the threshold or hold longer for the right buyer.
LA luxury is the most geographically heterogeneous luxury market in the US. Per-sqft ranges vary by ~10x across neighborhoods:
When evaluating any listing, compare per-sqft against recent sales in the same micro-neighborhood. Beverly Hills "Flats" trade at ~2x what Beverly Hills "Post-Office" does, despite both being "Beverly Hills."
Bel Air, Beverly Hills Flats, Holmby Hills, Beverly Park, Trousdale Estates. Lowest drop frequency, largest absolute discounts. Often estate or relocation sales. A 10% cut on a $25M house is $2.5M of real motion — meaningful, but the buyer pool is small enough that price cuts don't always close the deal.
Malibu Colony, Carbon Beach, Broad Beach, Paradise Cove. Insurance is the dominant driver of drop activity here. Many recent listings are owners who got their first non-renewal notice from State Farm and decided to exit while values are still elevated.
Pacific Palisades, Brentwood, Mandeville Canyon, Cheviot Hills. The most active drop segment by volume. Most listings here are second homes or trade-up sellers facing mansion-tax math.
Birds Streets, Sunset Strip, Mt. Olympus, Outpost Estates. View premium has compressed since 2021 — fewer remote-work tech buyers competing. Drops tend to be specific to listings that overpriced for the view market that no longer exists.
Studio City, Sherman Oaks, Encino, Toluca Lake. Most active mid-market drop segment. Trade-down buyers (Westside → Valley) provide consistent demand, so cuts tend to be smaller (~5-10%) and listings move faster.
Luxury Price Drops scans active LA listings on Zillow daily, capturing original listing price, every subsequent price change, and current asking price. Drops are detected within minutes. All figures derived from actual published asking prices — listing-side data, not transaction-side. For closed-transaction values, the LA County Assessor and Westside MLS are authoritative.
Luxury Price Drops is an independent analytics platform — not a brokerage. We publish public listing-market data so buyers and investors can read the LA luxury market clearly. We do not list, sell, or represent properties.
LA luxury spans roughly $700–1,400/sqft for the Valley (Studio City, Sherman Oaks, Encino) and Pasadena, $1,000–2,000/sqft for Santa Monica and Venice, $1,200–2,500/sqft for Hollywood Hills, $1,500–3,000/sqft for Westside prime (Pacific Palisades, Brentwood, Mandeville), $2,000–6,000/sqft for beach (Malibu Colony, Carbon Beach), and $2,500–6,000+/sqft for trophy estates (Bel Air, Beverly Hills Flats, Holmby Hills, Beverly Park). Always compare per-sqft to the specific micro-neighborhood.
Not crashing — but materially softer than 2021 peaks. Three forces concentrate motivated-seller activity: LA's Measure ULA mansion tax (4% on $5M+, 5.5% above $10M, live since April 2023); insurance carriers pulling back from fire zones with premium increases of 3-5x; and 2021-peak buyers with leveraged second homes facing higher carrying costs. Trophy estates trade infrequently but at strong values; the $3-10M mid-luxury segment shows the most drop activity.
We scan active LA listings on Zillow daily, capturing original listing price, every price change, and current asking price for each unit. Price drops are detected within minutes. All figures derived from actual published asking prices — listing-side data. For closed-transaction values, the LA County Assessor and Westside MLS are authoritative.
Daily. Listings are scanned every day and the panels on this page refresh continuously throughout the day. New price drops appear within minutes of being posted.
Measure ULA is LA's transfer tax on real estate sales: 4% on $5M+, rising to 5.5% above $10M. Effective April 2023, applies citywide within the City of LA (not Beverly Hills or Santa Monica). For sellers, ULA is paid at close — a $7M sale pays $280K. Practical effects: listings cluster just under $5M to dodge the tax; sellers in the $5-10M zone often hold longer rather than cut price; the $4-5M segment has compressed inventory as sellers price aggressively to stay under $5M.
By volume: Pacific Palisades, Brentwood, Hollywood Hills, and the Westside $3-8M segment lead — largest active luxury inventory plus highest concentration of mansion-tax-adjacent or insurance-pressured sellers. By absolute discount size: Malibu (insurance-driven), trophy Westside (Bel Air, Beverly Hills Flats) when sellers are motivated. Use the 'drops by area' panel for current activity.
Get a binding insurance quote in writing before MOU, not an estimate — California's luxury insurance market has tightened severely. Carriers (State Farm, Allstate, Farmers, USAA) have pulled back from fire zones, particularly anything west of the 405 above Sunset, canyon properties, Palisades, and Malibu. California FAIR Plan + an excess wrap policy is standard for high-value fire-zone homes. Premiums on a $5M Palisades home that were $8-15K in 2022 can be $40-80K+ today.
Compare the new asking price to the per-square-foot range of recent sales in the same micro-neighborhood — not to the seller's original price, and not to the broader 'LA luxury' average (which varies 10x by area). A cut that brings an overpriced unit back to the area median is not a deal. A unit now priced 10%+ below the micro-neighborhood per-sqft median is. Then check days on market, get a binding insurance quote, and verify any hillside slope/soil status before committing.
No. Luxury Price Drops is an independent analytics platform that publishes public listing-market data. We do not list, sell, or represent properties. Use this data to read the market, then contact listing agents on Zillow directly to view and transact.