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Moving to Los Angeles for the First Time: The Real Guide (2026)

Published 2026-07-01 · Best Movers LA editorial team

Quick answer: LA is enormous (503 sq miles), car-dependent in most areas, and expensive — but the tradeoffs are real. Read this before you sign a lease. Call (213) 676-9460 when you're ready to book the move.

Choosing a neighborhood

LA doesn't have one center. It has about fifteen. Where you live determines your commute, your social scene, and your monthly parking budget more than any other decision you'll make. General breakdown: Westside (Santa Monica, Venice, Brentwood) = expensive, car-dependent, near the beach. The Valley (Sherman Oaks, Studio City, Burbank) = more affordable, suburban, hot in summer, easy parking. East side (Silver Lake, Los Feliz, Echo Park) = walkable by LA standards, arts/food culture, still car-helpful. DTLA = highest walkability score, improving rapidly, higher crime in some areas than neighbors realize from the outside.

What LA actually costs

A 1-bedroom in a good area: $2,000–$2,800. Car, insurance, gas: $400–$600/month. Groceries (Trader Joe's + farmers market): $400–$600/month. Utilities (LADWP + SoCalGas): $100–$180/month. The total monthly "floor" for a comfortable single adult in a decent area is roughly $3,800–$4,500 before entertainment, dining, or savings.

Car realities

You will sit in traffic. The 405, the 10, the 101, and the 110 are genuinely among the worst-congested freeways in the country. Time your commute around this rather than fighting it — if your job is flexible, 10am–3pm and 7pm–9am are different highways than 8am–10am and 4pm–7pm. Remote work in LA is a genuine quality-of-life advantage.

California renter's rights

California has some of the strongest tenant protections in the country. Just-cause eviction requirements, rent increase limits (5% + CPI per year under AB 1482 for buildings 15+ years old), and mandatory 60-day notice for rent increases over 10%. Learn these before you sign — they're your rights and they're not optional for landlords.

Ready to make the move? Call (213) 676-9460 — we help hundreds of people relocate to LA every month.

Related questions

What is the cheapest neighborhood in Los Angeles to rent?

In 2026, the most affordable neighborhoods for renters are Boyle Heights ($1,600–$2,000/1BR), East Hollywood ($1,800–$2,200), Van Nuys ($1,500–$1,900), and Sylmar/Pacoima in the far north Valley ($1,300–$1,700). West LA, Santa Monica, and Beverly Hills typically run $2,600–$3,800 for a 1BR.

Do I need a car to live in Los Angeles?

Most LA neighborhoods require a car. Exceptions: DTLA, Silver Lake, Los Feliz, Koreatown, Mid-Wilshire, and parts of WeHo have usable Metro access. Everywhere else — the Valley, the Westside, the South Bay — is effectively car-dependent. Budget $300–$600/month for car, insurance, and gas if coming from a car-free city.

What is the first thing I should do when I move to Los Angeles?

Update your California DMV address within 10 days (required by law). Get a CA driver's license within 10 days if you're a new resident. Register your vehicle in CA within 20 days. Set up LADWP for utilities. Find a primary care doctor before you need one — the best LA practices have 3–6 week new-patient waits.

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