Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
🚷 Public Conduct/Jaywalking

Lakewood vs Los Angeles

How do jaywalking rules compare between Lakewood, CA and Los Angeles, CA?

Lakewood and Los Angeles have similar restriction levels.

Lakewood, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

California Assembly Bill 2147, the Freedom to Walk Act, amended Vehicle Code Section 21955 effective January 2023. Crossing midblock outside a marked crosswalk is now an infraction only when an immediate hazard of collision exists. LA Sheriff adopted the new statewide standard for unincorporated areas.

View full Lakewood rules β†’

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

California's Freedom to Walk Act, codified at Vehicle Code Section 21955, bars jaywalking citations unless a reasonably careful person would foresee an immediate collision danger. LAPD adopted matching guidance in 2023 so most mid-block crossings no longer support a ticket.

View full Los Angeles rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLakewoodLos Angeles
State lawAB 2147 / CVC 21955California Vehicle Code 21955
Effective dateJanuary 2023-
Citation standardImmediate collision hazard-
Local overridePreempted by state-
EnforcementLASD, CHP-
Effective-January 1, 2023
Standard-Immediate collision danger required
Base fine-$25 plus court assessments
LAPD policy-2023 training bulletin issued

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lakewood FAQ

Is jaywalking still illegal in LA County?

Only when an immediate collision risk exists. Under AB 2147 and Vehicle Code 21955, a deputy or officer cannot cite a pedestrian for a midblock crossing unless a reasonable person would see imminent danger of being struck.

Can a city or the county add a stricter local rule?

No. The Vehicle Code preempts local pedestrian crossing rules in this area. LA County and incorporated cities follow the state Freedom to Walk standard for any midblock crossing on roadways.

Los Angeles FAQ

Is jaywalking still illegal in Los Angeles?

Crossing mid-block is permissible when no reasonably careful person would expect an immediate collision. Stepping in front of close-in traffic remains a citable infraction under Vehicle Code 21955 even after the Freedom to Walk Act.

Can I fight a jaywalking ticket?

Yes. Request a trial by written declaration and argue no immediate collision risk existed. Body-cam footage and the officer's distance estimate are central. Many post-2023 LA citations have been dismissed on this standard.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool