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πŸ’° Local Taxes & Fees/Parking Tax

Los Angeles vs Norwalk

How do parking tax rules compare between Los Angeles, CA and Norwalk, CA?

Los Angeles and Norwalk have similar restriction levels.

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Los Angeles imposes a 10 percent parking occupancy tax on every paid parking transaction at commercial lots and garages. The operator collects from the customer and remits monthly to the Office of Finance.

View full Los Angeles rules β†’

Norwalk, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

LA County Code Title 4.72 imposes a 10 percent parking occupancy tax on commercial parking transactions in unincorporated areas. Operators register with the Treasurer-Tax Collector, collect tax from drivers, and remit monthly under audit by the TTC.

View full Norwalk rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLos AngelesNorwalk
Tax rate10% of parking charge-
Code sectionLAMC Β§21.50LA County Code Title 4.72
Filing frequencyMonthly returns required-
Operator bondThree months estimated tax-
Free parkingGenerally exempt from tax-
Rate-10 percent of fee
Coverage-Unincorporated commercial parking
Filing-Monthly to TTC
Exempt-Free, residential, government

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Los Angeles FAQ

Do I owe the tax on my employee parking?

If you provide parking free to employees you owe no tax. If employees pay any fee, even nominal, the operator must collect 10 percent and remit it monthly to the Office of Finance.

What about valet parking at restaurants?

Valet parking is taxable when a separate fee is charged. If valet is genuinely free with no charge to the customer or restaurant validation, no tax is due on that transaction.

Norwalk FAQ

Does the county parking tax apply at LA City lots?

No. LA City's 10 percent parking tax applies inside city limits under LAMC Section 21.14. The county's Title 4.72 tax applies only in unincorporated areas. Operators near city boundaries must verify which jurisdiction governs their lot.

Are valet and event parking covered?

Yes. Any commercial parking transaction in unincorporated LA County, including valet, monthly contract parking, and special-event lots, is subject to Title 4.72. Free spaces and government-owned spaces remain exempt.

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