Median Permit in 91367: $16,250 on 90 Filings — June 2026
Woodland Hills sits at the western edge of the San Fernando Valley, and over the 30 days ending June 9 its core ZIP did a steady, unflashy amount of residential building. In the window of May 11 – June 9, 2026, ZIP 91367 recorded 90 residential building permits inside Los Angeles. That is the headline, and it is a number worth sitting with before any table appears: not a boom, not a stall, but a working neighborhood turning over a modest stack of homeowner projects.
Every figure in this report is a slice of the City of Los Angeles sealed snapshot — the same daily-frozen dataset we publish for the metro as a whole, cut down to a single ZIP. Residential building permits (single-family and small multi-family) only; commercial and sub-trade permits are excluded at ingest. This is not a count of all construction permits issued in each city. With that framing in place, the 90-permit total tells you something specific: this is a neighborhood of owner-driven work, not large-scale development, and the rest of the data fills in exactly what kind.
A building permit is the city's written authorization to perform a defined piece of construction — issued before the work starts, tied to a specific parcel, and the public record that this report is built from. When 90 of them land in one ZIP in a month, each one is a household that has committed to a real project: a contractor hired, a scope drawn, money about to move.
That is what makes a ZIP-level permit cut useful to anyone whose business depends on knowing where residential work is happening before it shows up on a for-sale sign or a finished-job photo.
The 91367 Picture at a Glance
Read the volume against the value and the shape of the month comes through. ZIP 91367's 90 permits carried a total valuation of $6.0M, with a median permit valuation of $16,250. That median is the single most informative number in the report.
In ZIP 91367, the median residential permit valuation was $16,250 across 90 permits totaling $6.0M. A mid-five-figure median is the signature of homeowner remodeling — not teardowns, not ground-up construction.
A $16,250 median means half the permits in 91367 sat below that figure and half above. Pair that with a $6.0M total and the distribution writes itself: a large body of small-to-midsize jobs — kitchen and bath remodels, room reconfigurations, system replacements — with a handful of larger projects pulling the dollar total up without dragging the middle of the pack with them. This is the classic profile of an established residential ZIP where owners renovate the homes they already live in rather than developers reshaping the block.
For anyone reading the market, that distribution is the whole story. A neighborhood with a low median and a meaningful total is a neighborhood of many small clients, not a few big ones. That changes who should care about 91367 and how they should approach it — a point the later sections return to.
Key Findings
ZIP 91367 recorded 90 residential building permits over the window, sourced from the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety via data.lacity.org (Socrata).
Total reported valuation in 91367 reached $6.0M, drawn from the same sealed daily snapshot.
The median permit valuation was $16,250, the clearest signal that homeowner remodeling drives the ZIP.
Alteration & Repair was the leading category with 44 permits, per the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety via data.lacity.org (Socrata).
91367 sits among the busier Los Angeles ZIPs but well behind the 388-permit leader, 90272, per the same sealed snapshot.
ZIP 91367 Permit Activity, May 11 – June 9, 2026
The table below holds the headline figures for the ZIP. Each is a direct slice of the Los Angeles metro snapshot, not a separate collection — the same sealing discipline, filtered to the 91367 rows.
| Metric | ZIP 91367 |
|---|---|
| Residential permits | 90 |
| Total valuation | $6.0M |
| Median permit valuation | $16,250 |
| Reporting window | May 11 – June 9, 2026 |
| Source | data.lacity.org (Socrata) |
Ninety permits in a single ZIP over a 30-day window is real, recurring activity — enough that a contractor or supplier focused here would see new work appear week over week. The median anchors expectations: most of these jobs are renovations within an existing footprint, the kind that turn over inventory at a building-supply counter and keep skilled trades booked without requiring the capital or timeline of new construction.
For a fuller read on the city these figures sit inside, the metro-wide breakdown lives in the Los Angeles building permit report for June 2026, and the methodology that seals both is the same.
What Is Getting Built in 91367
The dominant permit type in 91367 is Bldg-Alter/Repair / 1 or 2 Family Dwelling — what we label Alteration & Repair — with 44 permits, just under half of the ZIP's total.
Alteration & Repair led ZIP 91367 with 44 of its 90 permits. When the single largest category is alteration, the neighborhood is remodeling what it already has, not building new.
An Alteration & Repair permit on a one- or two-family dwelling is the workhorse of residential construction. In Los Angeles, this category covers the broad middle of what homeowners actually do: reconfiguring interior layouts, replacing or upgrading kitchens and bathrooms, finishing or converting space, repairing structural and weatherproofing elements, and bringing older systems up to current code. It is the permit a homeowner pulls when the house stays the house but a meaningful piece of it gets rebuilt.
These jobs are pulled by general contractors and specialty trades on behalf of owners, and the scope ranges from a focused single-room remodel to a gut renovation that touches most of the home.
That 44 permits cluster in this one category — against a $16,250 median — confirms the read from the valuation distribution. The defining activity of 91367 is improvement of existing housing stock. For a remodeling contractor, a cabinet or fixture supplier, or a trade subcontractor, that is the addressable market in this ZIP: established homes whose owners are reinvesting, one project at a time.
For a real estate agent, a wave of alteration permits is a pre-listing tell — homes being readied, or owners settling in for the long haul, either of which is intelligence worth having before it is public.
The remaining permits spread across other residential types — additions and the occasional new dwelling among them — but none rivals the alteration count. A ZIP led this decisively by repair-and-remodel work is one where the housing is mature and the demand is for upgrading it, not replacing it.
The same pattern holds citywide, which is worth seeing in one place. The table below shows the top residential categories across all of Los Angeles in the window, with 91367's own alteration count alongside for scale.
| Category (source label) | Citywide permits | ZIP 91367 |
|---|---|---|
| Bldg-Alter/Repair / 1 or 2 Family Dwelling | 2,486 | 44 |
| Bldg-Addition / 1 or 2 Family Dwelling | 422 | — |
| Bldg-New / 1 or 2 Family Dwelling | 359 | — |
Alteration and repair dominates the city just as it dominates the ZIP — additions and new dwellings trail far behind. In that sense 91367 is not an outlier; it is Los Angeles in miniature, a remodel-led market from the block level up to the metro level.
How 91367 Compares in Los Angeles
A single ZIP's numbers gain meaning next to its peers. The table below sets 91367 against the other top Los Angeles ZIPs in the same sealed snapshot, with the citywide row for scale. Every figure is from the same May 11 – June 9, 2026 window.
| ZIP | Residential permits | Total valuation |
|---|---|---|
| 90272 | 388 | $66.2M |
| 90049 | 130 | $4.9M |
| 91344 | 95 | $2.4M |
| 90066 | 94 | $4.2M |
| 91367 | 90 | $6.0M |
| 91335 | 83 | $4.3M |
| 91364 | 79 | $1.5M |
| 90042 | 71 | $2.0M |
| 90039 | 67 | $6.0M |
| 90045 | 64 | $2.4M |
| Los Angeles (all) | 4,042 | $201.2M |
Two things stand out. First, 91367 ranks among the busier ZIPs by permit count, clustered tightly with 90066 at 94 permits, 91344 at 95, and neighboring 91364 at 79 — a Valley pack all running in the same range. Second, the contrast with 90272 is stark: that ZIP's 388 permits and $66.2M total sit in a different league entirely, the mark of a high-value enclave where project sizes dwarf the citywide median.
ZIP 91367 posted $6.0M on 90 permits; the citywide total was $201.2M on 4,042 permits. A single mid-tier ZIP carries a small but real share of the city's residential building.
It is also worth noting how 91367's $6.0M total stacks against neighbors with similar counts. ZIP 91364, right next door with 79 permits, totaled just $1.5M — meaning 91367's projects skew larger in dollar terms despite a comparable permit count. The same $6.0M total appears for 90039, which did it on only 67 permits, a reminder that ZIP-to-ZIP comparisons turn on project size as much as project count. Readers tracking the western Valley specifically can follow the dedicated reports for neighbors like ZIP 91335 and ZIP 91364.
Across the metro, the citywide figures provide the backdrop: 4,042 permits and a $201.2M total, with a citywide median permit valuation of $7,000. That citywide median — far below 91367's $16,250 — tells you 91367's typical project is meaningfully larger than the LA norm, consistent with an owner-occupied suburban ZIP where remodels run bigger than the citywide mix of small repairs and quick alterations. Elsewhere in the Valley, ZIP 91604 has its own dedicated report in this edition.
Methodology
The sourceAttribution for this report is the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety via data.lacity.org (Socrata). Every number above is a ZIP-level cut of the same sealed daily snapshots we compute for the Los Angeles metro — 91367 is not a separate dataset but a filter applied to the city's frozen rows.
Honesty statement: All figures are computed directly from US Tech Automations' sealed daily permit snapshots; nothing is estimated, modeled, or extrapolated. Where a value is not present in the underlying record, we leave it out rather than infer it. The scope is residential building permits (single-family and small multi-family); commercial and sub-trade permits are excluded at ingest. This is not a count of all construction permits issued in each city.
Here is how the pipeline produces a ZIP report like this one:
Collect. Each day we pull new and updated residential building-permit records from the Los Angeles open-data portal, keyed to parcel and ZIP.
Normalize. Categories, valuations, and locations are standardized so a Woodland Hills row reads the same way as one from any other Valley ZIP.
Seal daily. The day's records are content-hashed and frozen, so a snapshot can never be quietly rewritten after the fact.
Aggregate over the window. We sum and rank the sealed rows across May 11 – June 9, 2026, then filter to ZIP 91367 for this report.
Because the snapshots are sealed before any outcome is known, the figures here can be checked against the public Socrata record at the Los Angeles permits portal — the discipline is the point, not the polish.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Does the 90-permit count include every kind of construction in 91367?
A: No. The 90 figure counts residential building permits only — single-family and small multi-family. Commercial and sub-trade permits are excluded at ingest, so this is not a count of all construction permits issued in the ZIP. It is a focused read on homeowner-driven residential work.
Q: Why is the median permit valuation $16,250 when the total is $6.0M?
A: A $16,250 median with a $6.0M total across 90 permits points to many small-to-midsize jobs plus a few larger ones. The median tells you the typical project; the total reflects the whole spread, including the handful of bigger renovations that lift the dollar figure.
Q: What does the leading Alteration & Repair category actually cover?
A: Its source label is Bldg-Alter/Repair / 1 or 2 Family Dwelling. In Los Angeles it covers remodels, layout changes, system upgrades, and structural repairs to existing one- and two-family homes — the work owners do to improve a house they keep, not new construction. It led 91367 with 44 permits.
Q: How does 91367 rank against other Los Angeles ZIPs?
A: With 90 permits, 91367 sits among the busier ZIPs, clustered near 90066 at 94 and 91344 at 95, but well behind the leader 90272 at 388 permits and $66.2M. Citywide there were 4,042 permits totaling $201.2M.
Q: Who pulls these permits, and who should care?
A: Permits are pulled by contractors and trades on behalf of homeowners. The data is useful to remodeling contractors sizing a market, suppliers timing inventory, lenders reading renovation demand, and agents reading pre-listing signals in a specific neighborhood.
Put Permit Data to Work
A ZIP-level permit cut is only as valuable as the workflow it feeds. The same 90 permits read very differently depending on who is holding the list. A remodeling contractor sees 44 Alteration & Repair jobs as a map of active demand in Woodland Hills. A building-supply distributor reads the $16,250 median as a signal of what to stock and when. A lender treats a steady stream of mid-five-figure projects as renovation appetite worth financing. A real estate agent treats a cluster of alteration permits as a pre-listing tell — homes being prepared before they ever hit the market.
US Tech Automations turns sealed permit snapshots like this one into automated workflows: continuous monitoring of new permits in the ZIPs that matter to a business, routing of fresh records to the right person, and drafting of outreach the moment a relevant permit appears. The raw public record is browsable at the Los Angeles permits portal; the value we add is in turning that record into something that moves on its own. The same sealed-snapshot discipline behind this report also underpins our permit prediction ledger, where predictions are frozen before outcomes and scored in the open.
If your business works residential markets like 91367, US Tech Automations can wire permit signals straight into your pipeline. See how the real estate AI agents workflow turns a ZIP report into routed, ready-to-action leads.
Source: US Tech Automations Research — computed from sealed daily permit snapshots, May 11 – June 9, 2026.
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Cite this report
US Tech Automations Research, 2026-06 edition. “Median Permit in 91367: $16,250 on 90 Filings — June 2026.” https://ustechautomations.com/resources/blog/los-angeles-91367-building-permits
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