Parking in Los Angeles should not be this hard!
The city has an estimated 18.6 million parking spaces, covering 14 percent of all incorporated land in the county. That is roughly 3.3 spaces for every single registered vehicle.
Yet, LA drivers spend an average of 85 hours a year searching for parking, wasting about $1,785 in fuel and time per driver. So if the city has all this space, why does parking in LA feel like a full-time job?
The issue isn’t a lack of parking; it’s that the curb is being asked to do six different jobs at once. Between bus stops, delivery zones, rideshare pickups, street sweeping, fire lanes, and resident-only zones, the dizzying array of signs is simply the city’s attempt to “schedule chaos.”
“Parking management is trying to optimize availability — with the goal of keeping about 1 or 2 open spots on each block,” said Ellen Schwartz of the UCLA Center for Parking Policy. “So that spaces are well used, but also easy to find.”
When drivers don’t understand this schedule, it costs them. The City of Los Angeles collected $161 million in parking fines in a single year.
The Top Offender: Street sweeping is the most ticketed offense, with over 4.5 million citations issued over a nine-year period.
The Penalty: While the base fine is $73, late penalties drive the average cost up to $160.
Even professionals struggle with the overlapping rules. “The most difficult [region for parking] is Los Angeles,” noted Johnny Velarde of Valet Parking Pros. “Our office will call and different people will give us different answers.”
To deal with the headache, the city is shifting from trying to “fix” parking to managing it dynamically. LADOT’s “Code the Curb” program has already digitally mapped 22,275 curb zones in Downtown LA alone, preparing for real-time management ahead of the 2028 Olympics.
The goal is to move away from static, confusing signs and toward a digital system that can adjust to the city’s needs in real-time. For now, however, the burden remains on the driver to decipher the wall of red and green metal.
Watch the latest episode of California Post’s series “LA Explained” on the link above to learn more about why LA’s parking system isn’t broken — it’s just a system we don’t understand.
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