Drive-time mapping · California · Extended regional draw

45 Minutes From Los Angeles, CA

Forty-five minutes represents the limit of planned destination shopping for most households. Sites in this zone compete with regional malls, hospital campuses, and specialty retail clusters. It is the anchor for hub-and-spoke distribution strategies.

34.0522° N · 118.2437° W · Los Angeles city center

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Coverage analysis

What 45 minutes covers in Los Angeles.

Los Angeles is the canonical case study for why drive-time matters more than distance. A 5-mile straight-line radius can translate to a 12-minute drive at 10am and a 55-minute drive at 5pm, and any trade-area study that ignores this is effectively fiction.

At 45 minutes, the Los Angeles isochrone captures the extended regional draw — a regional footprint where destination-category businesses draw from a wide geographic spread. Unlike a 200–600 km² circle, the real road-network polygon follows Los Angeles's actual highway corridors, accounts for bridge and interchange chokepoints, and respects the natural and built barriers that force drivers to detour.

Best-fit categories at 45 minutes: Regional mall anchor, hospital, specialty medical, premium auto, luxury retail, cinema. The 45-minute isochrone is the standard input for regional territory design and logistics network planning.

The city-level population of 3,979,576 and a median household income of $65,290 give a sense of Los Angeles's economic density, but the figure that matters for site selection is the population inside the polygon — not the city as a whole. That number shifts dramatically depending on whether you're drawing from a high-density urban core or a lower-density suburban corridor. Use the tool above to set your actual candidate location, then generate the isochrone to see the real catchment.

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