LA County does not prohibit loitering itself, since vague loitering bans violate the First and Fourth Amendments. Title 13 reaches only narrow loitering-with-intent conduct, such as loitering to commit theft, prostitution-related solicitation, or drug sales, mirroring California Penal Code Sections 647 and 653.22.
Federal and California courts have struck down vague loitering ordinances since Papachristou v. Jacksonville and Kolender v. Lawson. LA County therefore relies on narrow loitering-with-intent provisions in Title 13 and on state Penal Code statutes. PC 647(h) prohibits loitering on private property without the owner's consent and intent to commit a crime, while PC 653.22 (as amended by SB 357 in 2022) repealed loitering with intent to commit prostitution. Anti-camping is governed separately under LACO Title 13 and homelessness-specific rules. The Sheriff is required to articulate specific suspicious conduct rather than mere presence. Schools, parks, and licensed premises have separate statutory limits.
Loitering with proven intent to commit a crime can be charged as a misdemeanor under California Penal Code 647(h) with up to six months jail and a $1,000 fine. Mere presence without specific suspicious conduct is not a violation.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Torrance, CA
Amplified sound must not exceed 15 dBA above ambient at property lines. On Sundays/holidays, amplified sound limited to 10 AM-6 PM. Must stay 200 ft from chu...
Torrance, CA
Torrance prohibits dogs from barking, howling, or making loud noises that disturb the peace of residential neighborhoods under TMC Β§41.1.2. Animal Control ha...
Torrance, CA
Machinery and mechanical equipment must not produce noise exceeding specified levels above ambient at residential property lines under TMC Chapter 6.
Torrance, CA
Powered gardening equipment including leaf blowers may operate Mon-Fri and 9 AM-5 PM Saturdays. Prohibited Sundays/holidays. Homeowners exempt 10 AM-4 PM on ...
Torrance, CA
Torrance adopts LA County Code Title 10 for animal control. No breed-specific bans exist, but dangerous/vicious dog declarations follow county procedures.
Torrance, CA
Dogs must be licensed annually and kept under control at all times per LA County Code Title 10, adopted by Torrance. Rabies vaccination required.
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Los Angeles County.
See how Torrance's loitering rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.