North Hollywood has the most active new construction pipeline of any central Valley submarket. It's also where the sharpest vintage-based pricing divergence in the Valley shows up — a 1965 RSO-covered building and a 2019 Costa-Hawkins exempt building on the same NoHo block trade at meaningfully different values. That divergence is widening in 2026. The July RSO rewrite makes it worse for pre-1978 inventory. The institutional buyer pool's aggressive bidding on post-1995 makes it better for newer product. Two submarkets inside one submarket.
North Hollywood is central Valley floor, transit-proximate via the Red Line, and has anchored much of the Valley's new apartment development since 2018. The result is a mixed inventory: substantial pre-1978 LA City RSO stock, meaningful 1980s and 1990s inventory, and a growing post-1995 cohort. Tenant demand is strong across the mix. Rent growth is constrained by regulatory regime on the older stock but more durable on newer inventory.
Price per unit runs $275,000 to $375,000. Days on market average 100 to 160 days on clean transactions. Vintage is the dominant pricing variable. Post-1995 Costa-Hawkins exempt trades tightest. Mid-vintage 1978-1994 (AB 1482 only) sits in the middle. Pre-1978 LA City RSO trades wider — and the pre-1978 gap is expanding in 2026. Buyer underwriting in 2026 explicitly distinguishes these three cohorts. Pricing your NoHo building against the wrong vintage comp is how sellers mis-price. For a current valuation on your North Hollywood building, request a free evaluation.
Roughly 1,000 units of new construction are expected to deliver in North Hollywood during 2026. That near-term supply absorbs modestly into rent growth on older inventory — particularly on stabilized pre-1978 buildings competing against new Class A for the same tenants. The implication for sellers: pre-1978 NoHo owners face a double headwind through 2026. Regulatory (RSO rewrite caps rent growth) plus supply (new deliveries compete for renters). The case to transact in 2026 is stronger for this cohort than for almost any other Valley submarket. Post-1995 NoHo owners face the opposite dynamic. New supply validates the submarket's demographic thesis. Institutional buyers treat the supply absorption as a confirming signal, not a risk.
Institutional PE value-add is active on pre-1978 with rent capture thesis and on stabilized post-1995. Disciplined underwriting; clean diligence preferred.
1031 exchangers are steady on all vintages, especially post-1995 stabilized.
Local family offices and Valley operators are consistent off-market buyers, particularly on pre-1978 where relationships with existing tenants matter for the operational handoff.
One: you own pre-1978 with meaningful below-market rent and no near-term turnover. The July 2026 RSO cap limits your ability to close the gap. New supply in the submarket puts pressure on rent growth for stabilized product. The math is pointing at 2026.
Two: you own post-1995 and the institutional buyer pool is active in your size range. Post-1995 NoHo pricing has tightened through 2025. If you were considering a sale for personal or portfolio reasons, Q2-Q3 2026 captures institutional pricing at or near cycle tightness.
Three: you've executed your value-add thesis and the upside is now baked in. If you renovated, captured rents, and the building is now stabilized, the next owner pays for stabilization — not upside. The exit multiple is today's number, not tomorrow's.
Fast: clean rent roll documented against tax returns, RSO registration current (for pre-1978), capital improvements documented, estoppels in hand, no unpermitted work. Slow: unpermitted ADUs (common in older NoHo), registration gaps, contested tenant occupancy, or capital work that surfaces at inspection. NoHo buildings prepared well close in 100-120 days. Buildings with unresolved compliance issues drift or concede.
North Hollywood is the Valley submarket where vintage matters most. Three regulatory regimes (RSO, AB 1482, Costa-Hawkins exempt) and three buyer pools (institutional value-add, 1031, local operators) intersect differently depending on when your building was built. For a seller, the most important question is: what cohort does my building actually sit in? A pre-1978 RSO owner reading a blended NoHo range is pricing too tight. A post-1995 owner reading the same range is pricing too loose. The cohort, not the submarket, drives the number. Get that right and the rest of the process is execution.
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