- Los Angeles will track and analyze corporate ownership in multifamily rental housing.
- The city’s Housing Department will define landlord categories and study impacts on tenants and small owners.
- Top 25 owners now control nearly 10% of rent-stabilized city housing units.
- The findings may guide targeted policies to protect small landlords and tenants.
City Responds to Multifamily Ownership Trends
According to Bisnow, Los Angeles is launching a study to evaluate the influence of corporate ownership on the local multifamily rental housing market. The initiative, led by the Los Angeles Housing Department, aims to categorize landlords and understand how the increasing presence of institutional investors affects tenants, small landlords, and prospective homebuyers.
Focus on Large Landlords and Housing Policy
Councilmember Monica Rodriguez initiated the effort and stressed the need to track growing corporate ownership. She argued that understanding this trend will help the city craft more effective housing policies, especially as officials continue tightening tenant protections across the city.
Previous city reports showed a steady rise in large landlord ownership between 2018 and 2023. During that period, the top 25 owners expanded their portfolios significantly. Together, they now control more than 58,300 units. That figure represents nearly 10% of Los Angeles’ rent-stabilized housing stock.
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Small Landlords and Regulatory Relief
Landlord associations and policymakers see this study as a potential path to relief programs tailored to small property owners. Many smaller landlords own older, rent-controlled properties and lack the resources of institutional players, industry advocates note. Defining ownership types may also clarify who would benefit most from future assistance measures.
Implications for the Multifamily Sector
The multifamily ownership review comes as corporate landlords face increased public and legislative scrutiny. The city’s assessment will inform whether targeted measures are needed to balance tenant protection and small owner viability, amid concerns about further corporate consolidation in the Los Angeles housing market.



