Rent affordability · Los Angeles
Can I afford $2,000/month rent in Los Angeles?
$2,000/month puts you in the top 76% of renters in Los Angeles by rent amount — $700 below the city median ($2,700).
Salary you need to afford this
Based on gross annual salary. The 30% rule (manageable threshold) is the most widely used benchmark — it means $2,000/month consumes exactly 30% of your monthly income.
How this compares in Los Angeles
$1,500
Budget rent
P10
$2,700
Typical rent
median
$4,500
High-end rent
P90
People in Los Angeles typically spend 28–52% of their gross income on rent. The median renter spends 38%.
Data confidence: medium · US Census ACS 2023 + UCLA Lewis Center housing research · 2023–2024
Frequently asked questions
Can I afford $2,000/month rent in Los Angeles?
Whether you can afford $2,000/month in Los Angeles depends on your salary. At the standard 30% rule, you need at least $80,000/year gross. At a stricter 25% threshold, you need $96,000/year. $2,000/month is below the city median — 24% of renters in Los Angeles pay less.
What salary do I need to afford $2,000 rent in Los Angeles?
To afford $2,000/month without spending more than 30% of gross income on rent, you need at least $80,000/year. For a more comfortable 25% target, the threshold rises to $96,000/year. At 35% — considered financially stretched — the minimum falls to $68,571/year.
Is $2,000/month rent expensive in Los Angeles?
$2,000/month is $700 below the city median. 24% of renters in Los Angeles pay less than this amount. Rent across Los Angeles ranges from roughly $1,500 (cheapest 10%) to $4,500 (top 10%).
Other rent amounts in Los Angeles