Homelessness drop in LA comes with questions over count methods


Summary

Homelessness data

According to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA), the number of homeless individuals in the Los Angeles region has dropped for the second year in a row, with a reported decrease of 3.4% in the city and 4% countywide.

Accuracy concerns

Some officials and community members have raised questions about the accuracy of the homeless count.

Ongoing challenges

The article notes that, despite a reported decrease in homelessness, there are still more than 72,000 people without housing in LA County.


Full story

The number of homeless people in the Los Angeles region dropped for the second year in a row, according to a count by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, or LAHSA. However, some officials have questioned the accuracy of the data.

Homeless count

LAHSA conducts an annual homeless count each January to track the number of homeless individuals in the area. It was postponed this year due to the wildfires that caused billions of dollars in damage to the region.

According to the most recent count, homelessness is down 3.4% in LA proper and down 4% countywide.

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“Homelessness has gone down two years in a row because we chose to act with urgency and reject the broken status quo of leaving people on the street until housing was built,” LA Mayor Karen Bass said in a statement. “These results aren’t just data points—they represent thousands of human beings who are now inside, and neighborhoods that are beginning to heal.”

LAHSA said several factors contributed to the decrease in the number of homeless people in LA, including the success of encampment resolution programs. LAHSA also said permanent housing placements reached an all-time high of nearly 28,000 last year, a 2.5% increase from the previous year.

“By bringing innovative solutions, system change, and working arm in arm with our partners over the last two years, LAHSA has helped move people inside with the urgency this humanitarian crisis demands,” LAHSA CEO Dr. Va Lecia Adams Kellum said in a statement.  “We can also see clearly that our work isn’t done. It’s crucial we keep moving forward, together, to sustain our reductions in unsheltered homelessness.”

The report shows unsheltered homelessness decreased nearly 10% in LA County and 8.5% in the city.

Homeless numbers had been on the rise in LA since 2018.

Questions about the count

Despite the positive numbers, some are questioning how LAHSA got them in the first place. The count relies on volunteers going out each night and counting the number of people experiencing homelessness.

“They started early and they ended by 12, midnight. They reduced the number of volunteers. They weren’t allowed to go up to RVs. They weren’t allowed to go into garages,” John Alle, co-founder of the Santa Monica Coalition, told KABC in Los Angeles. “So, how many did they miss? It’s like crime not being reported.”

At least one elected official also questioned the accuracy of the numbers.

“When there’s this much at stake, accuracy matters and we can’t afford to make decisions based on data that may not reflect what’s actually happening on the ground,” LA Councilmember John Lee told LAist. “Until we have a more reliable and consistent system of reporting, it’s difficult to fully trust that the numbers we’re seeing are telling the whole story.”

LAist also reported that LAHSA removed more volunteer observations while compiling the 2024 data, and a recent report from the RAND Corporation found LAHSA systemically undercounted the real number of homeless during the 2024 count.

However, many officials lauded the results, saying they show that LA is moving in the right direction.

“The data shows a promising trend in our efforts to reduce homelessness and should encourage policymakers at every level of government to continue to invest in housing and services so that every Californian has access to safe, affordable, and sustainable housing,” Assemblymember Nick Schultz said in a statement.

The data shows there are still more than 72,000 people without housing in LA County.

Cole Lauterbach (Managing Editor) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The reported decrease in homelessness in Los Angeles raises questions about data accuracy and highlights ongoing debates about the effectiveness of housing initiatives and how homelessness is measured.

Homelessness data accuracy

Concerns have been raised by some officials and advocacy groups about the reliability of the homelessness count due to changes in the counting process and potential undercounting, as indicated by statements from the Santa Monica Coalition and a RAND Corporation report.

Policy effectiveness

The reported decline in homelessness is attributed by Los Angeles officials and LAHSA to urgent policy changes and increased housing placements, prompting discussions about the impact and limitations of current interventions.

Public accountability

Debates over the accuracy of data and the need for transparent and reliable reporting underscore the importance of public trust and accountability in addressing homelessness and shaping related policies.

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Context corner

The region’s homelessness crisis is deeply rooted in decades of policy choices, including housing restrictions, loss of affordable housing, economic shifts, and underinvestment in mental health and social services. Historical exclusionary zoning, redlining, and the dismantling of public housing have exacerbated homelessness, especially among communities of color. These systemic factors continue to influence present-day outcomes.

Do the math

Los Angeles spent nearly $2.5 billion over eight years on homelessness-related programs. The homeless population dropped from 75,312 in 2024 to 72,308 in 2025—about 3,000 fewer people. Unsheltered homelessness dropped by 9.5% countywide, while 27,994 people were placed into permanent housing in 2024. Interim housing placements also rose by 8.5%.

Quote bank

“Homelessness has gone down two years in a row because we chose to act with urgency and reject the broken status quo of leaving people on the street until housing was built,” said Mayor Karen Bass. Supervisor Lindsey Horvath warned, “At this pace, it would take three centuries to end homelessness in Los Angeles County.”

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Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left centers on positively framing the decline in homelessness as evidence of effective government intervention and progressive policies, emphasizing terms like “valiantly” and “all-time low” to highlight leadership efforts and humane outcomes.
  • Not enough unique coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right focus more on organizational accountability and financial oversight, characterizing LAHSA as “plagued with audits” and detailing reforms like the new county homeless department, employing a cautious though optimistic tone with phrases such as “very good news” tempered by concerns about lingering costs and pace.

Media landscape

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34 total sources

Key points from the Center

  • Data released in 2025 indicates that homelessness decreased for the second year in a row across both Los Angeles County and the city itself.
  • This decline follows a record homelessness high in 2023 and was influenced by city and county initiatives, with the 2025 count postponed due to January wildfires.
  • Homelessness dropped 4% countywide and 3.4% in the city, with unsheltered homelessness falling 9.5% overall and 7.9% in Los Angeles in 2025.
  • Mayor Karen Bass highlighted that homelessness has decreased for the second consecutive year as a result of prompt and decisive action, while LAHSA reported a 12.6% drop in street encampments alongside a record 27,994 permanent housing placements in 2024.
  • Despite these gains, officials warn that 72,308 people remain homeless, over 485,000 affordable housing units are needed, and a new county homelessness department aims to improve services amid ongoing challenges.

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Key points from the Right

  • Los Angeles County reported a 4% decrease in homelessness, falling to approximately 72,308 individuals, according to the 2025 homeless count released on July 14.
  • The count also showed a 9.5% drop in unsheltered homeless individuals, with a 14% decrease over the last two years, as stated by Va Lecia Adams Kellum.
  • The establishment of a new county agency for homeless services aims to streamline efforts and improve tracking of resources, as highlighted in Supervisor Kathryn Barger’s statement.

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