How Much Does a Koi Pond Cost in Orange County?
Our detailed OC pricing guide — the baseline for understanding koi pond costs across Southern California.
Read →By Pacific Coast Ponds · 8 min read · Updated 2025
A professionally built koi pond in Los Angeles County typically costs between $18,000 and $90,000+. LA's higher labor costs, permitting complexity, and diverse geography push pricing slightly above the Orange County baseline — but the investment is well worth it in LA's luxury backyard market.
Los Angeles is one of the best places in the world to own a koi pond. The climate is ideal — mild year-round with minimal frost risk — and the luxury backyard culture in neighborhoods like Bel Air, Pacific Palisades, and Calabasas means koi ponds are a natural fit for the market. The pool-to-pond conversion trend has also accelerated significantly across LA County as homeowners look for lower-maintenance, higher-beauty alternatives to traditional pools.
Here's a working price framework for LA County:
These ranges assume engineered filtration, bottom drains, proper aeration, and professional-grade construction — the standard required to keep koi healthy and water clear long-term. Discount builds exist but typically require costly rebuilds within 3–5 years.
Here's how the budget typically breaks down across a mid-size LA County project:
| Component | Typical Cost (LA) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Excavation & grading | $3,000 – $10,000 | Hillside properties and decomposed granite add cost |
| Liner or concrete shell | $4,000 – $18,000 | Gunite preferred in LA for hillside stability |
| Filtration system | $3,000 – $14,000 | Drum filters, bead filters, settlement chambers |
| Bottom drains & plumbing | $2,000 – $6,000 | Critical for long-term water clarity |
| Pump & aeration | $1,200 – $5,000 | Energy-efficient variable-speed pumps reduce monthly cost |
| Waterfall / stream feature | $4,000 – $15,000 | LA clients frequently opt for dramatic multi-tier waterfalls |
| Surrounding landscaping | $3,000 – $15,000 | Boulder work, tropical plantings, lighting popular in LA |
| Permits (where required) | $500 – $3,000 | LA County and city jurisdictions vary; see permits section |
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Schedule Free EstimateIf you've read our Orange County koi pond cost guide, you'll notice LA pricing runs roughly 10–20% higher for equivalent projects. Three factors drive this gap:
Los Angeles County has higher prevailing labor rates than most of Orange County, particularly for skilled trades (concrete, plumbing, electrical). For a $50,000 OC project, the equivalent LA build often runs $55,000–$58,000 based on labor alone.
LA County's geography is dramatically more varied than OC's. Hillside properties in Bel Air, Topanga, or Malibu involve retaining walls, slope stabilization, and sometimes engineered foundations that simply don't apply to most OC flatland builds. Access issues — narrow canyon roads, steep driveways — also add equipment and logistics costs.
Los Angeles County contains 88 incorporated cities, each with different permitting requirements. Unincorporated LA County goes through the county building department; cities like Beverly Hills, Santa Monica, or Pasadena have their own permit offices and inspection schedules. This adds both cost and timeline compared to OC, where fewer jurisdictions and more streamlined permitting apply.
Where you live in LA County significantly affects project cost and complexity:
| Area | Key Cost Factors | Typical Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Bel Air / Brentwood / Pacific Palisades | Hillside access, premium landscaping expectations, HOA review | +20–30% |
| San Fernando Valley (Encino, Sherman Oaks, Calabasas) | Flat terrain, good access, simpler permitting | +5–10% |
| Pasadena / Arcadia / San Marino | Heritage homes, mature trees, sometimes tight lot constraints | +10–15% |
| South Bay (Manhattan Beach, Hermosa, Redondo) | Sandy soil, salt air proximity, smaller lots | +10–20% |
| Long Beach / Lakewood / Cerritos | Flat, good access, simpler terrain | +5–10% |
| Malibu / Topanga | Fire zone restrictions, coastal commission, difficult access | +25–40% |
The table above shows premiums relative to a baseline OC flatland build. The "typical premium" is directional — every site is unique, which is why we always do a free site visit before quoting.
A significant portion of desirable LA properties sit on hillsides — which is also exactly where the most spectacular pond and waterfall designs are possible. But hillside construction adds real cost: engineered retaining walls, cut-and-fill grading, compaction requirements, and sometimes soils reports. Budget an additional $5,000–$20,000 for meaningful hillside work depending on steepness and soil conditions.
One of the most popular projects in LA right now is converting an unused swimming pool into a koi pond. LA has tens of thousands of pools that haven't been used in years — they consume water, chemicals, and electricity with no enjoyment. A pool-to-pond conversion typically costs $25,000–$55,000 and delivers a stunning, low-chemical water feature that actually gets used. The existing shell and plumbing reduce excavation costs, but filtration, aeration, and biological systems still need to be built from scratch to support koi.
LA clients tend to have ambitious visions — multi-tier waterfalls, infinity-edge effects, integrated stream systems that wind through the garden. These features are achievable and genuinely spectacular, but each adds to the project cost. A single-tier 6-foot waterfall adds $4,000–$6,000; a full 20-foot stream system with multiple falls can add $15,000–$25,000.
Properties in LA County's Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ) — which includes most foothill and canyon communities — face additional requirements for combustible materials and landscaping. A koi pond itself is not restricted in fire zones (water features can actually serve as fire suppression resources), but associated wood decking, structures, and vegetation must meet fire-resistant standards. We navigate these requirements as part of our standard LA County design process.
This is one of the most common questions we get from LA homeowners — and the answer depends heavily on your specific jurisdiction and project scope.
We handle the permitting assessment and application as part of every project. In most cases, we can advise you on the permit requirement before you commit to anything — and in many LA neighborhoods, small-to-mid ponds don't require permits at all.
Not sure if your LA project needs a permit?
We'll assess your site, advise on permitting, and give you a fixed-price proposal — all for free.
Schedule Free Site VisitOnline pricing calculators and contractor estimating tools are essentially useless for koi ponds — the site variables are too significant. The only reliable way to get an accurate number is a free site visit.
Our LA County process:
We serve all of Los Angeles County — from the South Bay to the San Fernando Valley, from Pasadena to Malibu. For a detailed breakdown of what goes into our Orange County pricing (which uses the same methodology), see our OC koi pond cost guide. For maintenance expectations after your pond is built, see our koi pond maintenance guide.
Our detailed OC pricing guide — the baseline for understanding koi pond costs across Southern California.
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