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    Home»Economy & Policy»Housing & Jobs»Investors Are Buying 40% of Land Selling in Areas Hit by L.A. Fires
    Housing & Jobs

    Investors Are Buying 40% of Land Selling in Areas Hit by L.A. Fires

    Money MechanicsBy Money MechanicsJanuary 1, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
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    Investors Are Buying 40% of Land Selling in Areas Hit by L.A. Fires
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    • Investors purchase roughly 2 in 5 lots that sell in the Pacific Palisades, Altadena and Malibu areas; many of these lots once held homes destroyed in the January fires.
    • Residents are grappling with a tough decision: Rebuild in the neighborhood they love, or sell to an investor in hopes of recouping some of their investment.
    • Despite investor activity, many people trying to sell lots are struggling to find buyers due to oversupply; the Altadena area had 225 lots for sale in the past three months, up from just two a year earlier.

    Real estate investors are buying roughly 40% of the land selling in areas impacted by the January 2025 California wildfires.

    In the 90272 zip code (Pacific Palisades), investors purchased 48 of the 119 lots (40.3%) that sold in the third quarter. That compares with zero lot purchases a year earlier—from both investors and other buyers.

    Investors Buy 2 in 5 Lots That Sell in Areas Hit by L.A. Fires (Stacked column chart)


    In the
    91001 zip code (Altadena), investors bought 27 of the 61 lots (44.3%) that sold. That also compares with zero lot purchases a year earlier from investors and other buyers. 

    And in the 90265 zip code (Malibu), investors bought 19 of the 43 lots that sold (44.2%). That’s more than double the 21.4% share of a year earlier.

    This is based on a Redfin analysis of investor lot purchases in county records, roughly 80% of which indicated there was once a home on the property. Investor data goes through the third quarter of 2025—the most recent period available. The following sections, which cover overall listings and sales of lots and single-family homes, use MLS data through November 2025. In the remainder of this report, we refer to the 90272 zip code as “Pacific Palisades,” the 91001 zip code as “Altadena” and the 90265 zip code as “Malibu.”

    “In Altadena, there’s a real push around the idea that the community is not for sale,” said Redfin Premier real estate agent Sylva Khayalian. “People who plan to stay are encouraging others not to sell because of how much it could change the neighborhood—but for some residents, selling is the only option that makes financial sense.”

    A lot of the homes that burned down in Altadena were built in the 1940s or 1950s. Khayalian said many investors are making lowball offers for the lots, with plans to flip the land into new houses. Some owners are rejecting these offers, but others are signing on the dotted line because they’re desperate to sell, she said. A lot of the residents who plan to sell are elderly or were underinsured when their home burned down, meaning they don’t have the money to rebuild. The rebuilding process has been painstaking for many residents, who have been waiting nearly a year for permits, but Khayalian said she has seen more builders break ground in the past few weeks. Many homeowners who lost their homes are living in rentals nearby, while others have left town.

    In Pacific Palisades—a much more affluent neighborhood—some people whose homes burned down have purchased another home to live in while they decide whether to rebuild, said Redfin Premier real estate agent Justin Vold. One of Vold’s clients bought a $3.75 million home near Santa Monica, and plans to work with a renowned architect to rebuild their house that burned in Pacific Palisades. Another client whose Malibu home was destroyed by the fires recently purchased a $4.68 million Pacific Palisades house, which didn’t burn in the fires but faces landslide risk. 

    The average household income in Pacific Palisades is nearly $400,000, more than double the typical household income in Altadena.

    “A lot of people whose homes burned in the Palisades purchased houses in Santa Monica, Santa Barbara, Manhattan Beach, Orange County and San Diego,” Vold said. “In the spring, we saw prices in the North of Montana neighborhood of Santa Monica jump 10% and bidding wars on $11 million homes.”

    Vold expects to see more buyers enter the market as insurance stops covering temporary rentals for people whose homes burned down and as more residents give up on the idea of rebuilding. If more people decide against rebuilding, the pileup of vacant lots on the market will grow.

    There’s a Pileup of Land for Sale in the Areas Hit by the Fires


    It’s
    not uncommon for investors to buy and develop land after natural disasters. And while investors have been active in areas impacted by the Los Angeles wildfires, Redfin agents say there’s so much land for sale that much of it is sitting on the market unsold.

    In all three zip codes Redfin analyzed, there are far more listings—of both vacant lots and single-family homes—than sales.

    In Pacific Palisades, there were 309 lot listings during the three months ending November 30, up from just seven a year earlier. In Altadena, lot listings jumped to 225 from two over the same period, and in Malibu, they rose to 214 from 125.

    “There are so many lots sitting on the market that sellers are starting to cut prices to attract offers,” Khayalian said. “Many of the lots that are selling in Altadena are in the $500,000 to $600,000 range. If there was still a home on them, they might sell for $1 million or more.”

    The typical lot that sold in Altadena during the three months ending November 30 went for $510,000, while the typical lot that sold in Pacific Palisades went for $1.6 million. In Malibu, the typical lot that sold went for $1.3 million.

    Some properties in areas impacted by the fires have been hard to value because there’s not much turnover and the surrounding infrastructure has been destroyed, noted Redfin Premier agent Carlos Castillo.

    Housing-Market Summary for Areas Impacted by Fires: Three Months Ending Nov. 30

      Three months ending Nov. 30, 2025 Three months ending Nov. 30, 2024
    Pacific Palisades (90272)
    Vacant lots for sale 309 7
    Vacant lots sold 107 0
    Single-family homes for sale 118 140
    Single-family homes sold 31 45
    Altadena (91001)
    Vacant lots for sale 225 2
    Vacant lots sold 80 0
    Single-family homes for sale 124 122
    Single-family homes sold 58 67
    Malibu (90265)
    Vacant lots for sale 214 125
    Vacant lots sold 37 12
    Single-family homes for sale 283 279
    Single-family homes sold 37 33

    Home Sales Tick Up in the Palisades and Altadena But Remain Below Pre-Fire Levels


    There were 31
    sales of single-family homes in Pacific Palisades during the three months ending November 30, up from a record low of just six in the three-month period after the fires started, but down from 45 a year earlier. 

    In Altadena, there were 58 sales of single-family homes, up from a record low 26 in the three-month period after the fires started, but down from 67 a year earlier. Redfin’s records date back to 2015.

    There are far fewer sales of single-family homes than there are sales of vacant lots in Pacific Palisades and Altadena—a reversal from before the fires. 

    In Pacific Palisades, there were 107 lot sales during the three months ending November 30, up from zero a year earlier. In Altadena, there were 80, also up from zero a year earlier. In Malibu, lot sales rose to 37 from 12.

    “The homes for sale that didn’t burn are only attracting offers if they’re priced reasonably and the owner has remediated ash and smoke damage,” Khayalian said. “The most important thing someone looking to buy in this area can do is figure out if they can afford insurance. Mortgage lenders in California require homebuyers to have fire coverage, and premiums have gone up by 35% to 50% since the fires.”

    One wall of Khayalian’s house burned in the fires, but fortunately members of the community put out the flames with pool water before they could spread. Still, the cost to clean up the damage has been in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. A remediation company cleaned up the ash and smoke residue, which cost nearly $70,000 and was covered by Khayalian’s insurance. But there was also lead exposure due to the fires, which cost $160,000 to clean up—an expense she’s still fighting to get her insurer to cover. The wall that burned cost $20,000 to repair, and there was nearly $30,000 of landscaping work that needed to be done because there was heavy rain after the fires, which created two inches of mud.

    “The cost of cleaning up smoke and ash damage can be so exorbitant that some homeowners are morbidly joking about how it might be easier if their house had just burned down.”

    Methodology


    We define an investor as any buyer whose name includes at least one of the following keywords: LLC, Inc, Corp, Homes. We also define an investor as any buyer whose ownership code on a purchasing deed includes at least one of the following keywords: association, corporate trustee, company, joint venture, corporate trust. We do not count purchases made through family trusts as investor purchases.



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