Best city for retirement? Los Angeles, CA
For retirement, Los Angeles is a specialized pick when you value median household income and age 65+ share. Overall, it’s a more specialized pick in this set (#200 of 200). The biggest tradeoff is commute 45+ min share.
Scope note (city proper)
This page scores the incorporated city limits (Census “Place”), not the metro area. Popular retirement destinations can look very different at the metro level.
Why Los Angeles ranks here
- Median household income: $80,366 (6% higher than the national median; better for this metric).
- Age 65+ share: 14% (1% higher than the national median; better for this metric).
- Typical rent (2BR): $2,148/mo (49% higher than the national median; worse for this metric).
Watch-outs
- Commute 45+ min share: 23% (104% higher than the national median; worse for this metric).
- Typical home value: $879,500 (153% higher than the national median; worse for this metric).
City snapshot
Basic demographics from ACS 2023 (city proper).
Key metrics
Values shown are from ACS 2023. National medians are computed across the ranked city set.
Score breakdown (by category)
Category scores are 0–100 and summarize groups of metrics used in the final score.
Education (age 25+)
Share of adults by attainment (ACS).
Age mix
Share of residents age 65+ (ACS).
Internet access
Household broadband subscription (ACS).
Scorecard breakdown
Bars are rescaled to 0–100 for readability (percentage metrics use their actual percent).
Similar cities (by score)
FAQ
›What is Los Angeles’s retirement score and rank?
›Is this based on Los Angeles city proper or the metro area?
›What is the population of Los Angeles, CA?
›What is the male vs female split in Los Angeles, CA?
›How affordable is housing in Los Angeles, CA?
›What share of residents are 65+ in Los Angeles, CA?
›How common is broadband internet in Los Angeles, CA?
›What does the education mix look like in Los Angeles, CA?
›Where does this data come from for Los Angeles, CA?
Note: Scores are informational and depend on data coverage and methodology. Always validate against your personal constraints (healthcare access, neighborhoods, taxes, climate preferences, support network).