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Los Angeles Real Estate Blog & Market Updates


Relocating to Los Angeles: Valley or Westside?
Both sides of Los Angeles offer real value when you're relocating, but they deliver different things. The Westside (Santa Monica, Brentwood, Beverlywood, Pacific Palisades) is denser, cooler in the summer, more walkable, and more expensive per square foot. The San Fernando Valley (Tarzana, Encino, Sherman Oaks, Woodland Hills) is more spacious, warmer, family-oriented, and gives you significantly more home and lot for your budget. The right side for you depends on where you w
Leegie Parker
Jun 89 min read


Tarzana vs. Encino vs. Woodland Hills: Which Valley Neighborhood Fits You?
If you are comparing Tarzana vs. Encino vs. Woodland Hills, the right neighborhood depends on your budget, lifestyle, and what kind of daily life you want. Tarzana is the smallest and most community-oriented of the three, with a strong south-of-Ventura premium. Encino carries the most prestige and the highest price points, with easier Westside access. Woodland Hills is the largest, offers the most inventory and the lowest entry point for single-family homes, and gives buyers
Leegie Parker
May 2113 min read


Commons Lane Calabasas: What the Redevelopment Means for West Valley Real Estate
Commons Lane Calabasas is a mixed-use redevelopment transforming The Commons at Calabasas from a traditional shopping center into a walkable village with 80 luxury apartments, 27,000 square feet of new restaurants and boutiques, and a community green space. For Calabasas and West Valley homeowners, the project is likely to reinforce the area's premium market positioning over time, making the neighborhood more attractive overall without dramatically shifting prices in either d
Leegie Parker
May 148 min read


The Westside Just Got Smaller: What the New Metro D Line Means for Your Neighborhood
The Metro D Line Westside extension opened on May 8, 2026, adding three new subway stations along Wilshire Boulevard at La Brea, Fairfax, and La Cienega. Riders can now travel from Union Station to the edge of Beverly Hills in about 20 minutes with no transfers, giving neighborhoods like Beverlywood, West LA, Brentwood, and the Miracle Mile faster, car-free access to Downtown and some of LA’s most important cultural destinations.
Leegie Parker
May 118 min read


How the 2026 World Cup Will Affect LA Neighborhoods Beyond SoFi Stadium
The 2026 World Cup will affect LA neighborhoods well beyond SoFi Stadium. Los Angeles is using a hub-and-spoke transit model that turns locations across the county into primary activation points for 39 days. Transit gateways in North Hollywood, Woodland Hills, Culver City, and Santa Monica will funnel fans to the stadium on match days. Fan zones at the LA Memorial Coliseum, Venice Beach, Hansen Dam, Union Station, Downtown Burbank, and other locations will bring event-day cro
Leegie Parker
May 713 min read
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