The version of your browser is no longer supported. Update it for a better experience.

137 results for:

Luxury homes for sale in Los Angeles, California

  • Detached House in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County
    Detached House in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County
    € 860,300
    84 m² 2 3
    Presented by Emily Johnson | Sotheby's International Realty - Los Feliz Brokerage
    Collection
  • Detached House in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County
    Detached House in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County
    € 602,700
    114 m² 3 3
    Presented by Yolanda Caldwell | Sotheby's International Realty - Brentwood Brokerage
    Collection

luxury guide

Los Angeles houses are a category of their own. There are 137 on the market right now, and the variety is something no other American city can match. Canyon properties, ocean-view hillside homes, craftsman bungalows with mature gardens, ranch-style compounds with detached guest quarters: the city spreads across enough geography to support completely different markets within thirty minutes of each other. Buyers from the UK, Europe and Asia Pacific consistently return to LA for one reason: the combination of indoor-outdoor living, private land and year-round usability that houses here make possible. Malibu, Pasadena, Pacific Palisades and Calabasas define the top end, while Silver Lake and Eagle Rock draw buyers who want architectural character at a sharper price point.

How much does a house cost in Los Angeles

Entry-level in the outer neighborhoods starts at €860,000. The ceiling, for canyon estates and beachfront compounds in Malibu, sits at €8,400,000. The average purchase price lands at €2,100,000. Floor areas run from 57 to 1426 sqm, averaging 342 sqm, with bedroom counts between 1 and 15. Three variables move the price more than anything else: canyon or ocean views, a private pool and the presence of a detached studio or guest house. A home with all three in Bel Air costs significantly more than a comparable footprint without them. Garage space matters too, more than buyers from Europe typically expect. Homes with terraced gardens, drought-tolerant landscaping and solar panels have been selling faster than the rest of the market for the past several years.

Where to buy a house in Los Angeles

Bel Air sets the standard for scale and privacy. The houses here sit behind security gates on large lots, with city and canyon views that explain the price differential immediately. Pacific Palisades is where families with serious budgets tend to land: generous floor plans, double garages and Santa Monica beach within cycling distance. Hancock Park draws buyers who want original 1920s and 1930s architecture, wide lots and tree-lined streets that feel genuinely residential. The craftsman houses here hold their value well, which is not a coincidence. Silver Lake has changed sharply in the last decade: independent homes with design-led renovations, rooftop decks and hillside outlooks now attract international buyers who would have looked at West Hollywood five years ago. And Pasadena remains the most consistent market in the region, with historic houses, large gardens and a calmer pace that many buyers only discover after years of looking elsewhere.