If you’ve ever left Los Angeles at 4 p.m. only to still be on the freeway at 7 p.m., you already know rush hour in that city doesn’t follow the rules. In most American cities, peak congestion builds for an hour or two, then clears. In Los Angeles, it lingers, stretches, and sometimes seems like it never fully ends.
That isn’t just a feeling; it’s a reality shaped by the city’s geography, infrastructure, and the way millions of people travel every single day. Keep reading to learn more.
Quick Answer
Why Does Rush Hour Last So Long in Los Angeles?
Rush hour in Los Angeles lasts longer than in most U.S. cities because of a near-total dependence on personal vehicles, a sprawling geography with no single employment hub, and a freeway network that handles the majority of daily trips.
With over 76% of LA County workers commuting by car, peak congestion builds across multiple corridors simultaneously and takes hours to clear. Hybrid work schedules have further blurred traditional rush hour windows, keeping traffic elevated from mid-morning well into the evening.
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Los Angeles Is Built Around the Car
To understand why rush hour lasts so long in Los Angeles, it helps to start with how the city was built in the first place. While the Los Angeles region was once home to the nation’s most extensive rail system, it largely developed in the age of the automobile, resulting in an urban form and infrastructure that prioritizes cars and trucks over other modes of transportation.
That car-first orientation is still very much in place today. According to 2023 U.S. Census data, 76.3% of Los Angeles County workers commuted by car, truck, or van, meaning the vast majority of the region’s roughly 4.7 million workers funnel into the same freeway system within overlapping windows of time.
Unlike cities such as New York or Chicago, where a large share of commuters use subway systems, LA offers limited transit alternatives for most residents. Four out of five trips in Los Angeles are taken via personal car, and LA residents own nearly 2.5 times as many cars on average as New Yorkers.
With so many vehicles and so few alternatives, the freeways absorb an outsized share of daily travel demand, and they show it.
What Does “Rush Hour” Look Like in Los Angeles?
In most cities, rush hour is a defined window. In Los Angeles, it’s more of a prolonged condition with multiple phases that bleed into one another.
The morning rush hour begins around 6:30 a.m. and extends until 9:00 a.m., when commuters heading to workplaces, schools, and other destinations flood Los Angeles freeways.
The evening rush hour spans from roughly 3:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. That’s potentially more than six combined hours of peak or near-peak conditions on a typical weekday, before accounting for incidents, construction, or weather.
The situation is further complicated by how hybrid and remote work has shifted travel patterns. Midday trips in the U.S. have increased 23% compared to 2019, with nearly as many trips taken at 12:00 p.m. as at 5:00 p.m., suggesting that 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. is effectively the new 9-to-5 for many workers.
In Los Angeles, that shift means congestion no longer has a clean midday break; instead, traffic tends to stay elevated from mid-morning well into the evening.
Why Does Congestion Take So Long to Clear?
One of the key reasons LA rush hour outlasts rush hour in other cities is the sheer scale of the freeway network and the distances people travel. Los Angeles is one of the most geographically spread-out metropolitan areas in the country, and most of its employment centers are not concentrated in a single downtown core.
Commuters travel in many directions across a region that spans hundreds of square miles, which means peak demand hits different freeway corridors at different times, thus extending the overall window of congestion rather than concentrating it.
The numbers reflect the cumulative effect of all this:
- According to the 2025 INRIX Global Traffic Scorecard, LA drivers lost 86 hours to congestion in 2024, making it one of the three most congested urban areas in the United States.
- During rush traffic, travel times in Los Angeles more than doubled compared to free-flowing conditions, with the average commuter spending 86 of their 157 annual driving hours stuck in congestion.
- On the single worst day of 2023 (November 15), when a section of I-10 remained closed after a fire, average travel times for a regular 6-mile trip reached over 20 minutes, compared to the annual average of just under 15 minutes.
When one freeway slows down, drivers shift to alternate routes, which then slow down in turn. Recovery takes time because there is no single point of relief: traffic disperses across dozens of interconnected corridors, each one carrying more load than it was designed to handle.
How Does Los Angeles Compare to Other U.S. Cities?
Los Angeles is frequently cited among the most congested cities in the country, though it no longer holds the top spot it once did. According to the 2024 INRIX Global Traffic Scorecard, New York City and Chicago each ranked above Los Angeles in total hours lost to congestion, at 102 hours each compared to LA’s 88 hours.
What makes LA’s congestion distinctive is not necessarily its peak intensity but its duration and geographic spread. In a more centralized city such as Chicago, congestion tends to concentrate in and around the downtown core during defined morning and evening peaks.
In Los Angeles, the absence of a single dominant employment hub means traffic builds and dissolves unevenly across a much larger area, and that pattern makes rush hour feel, and function, more like an all-day condition with varying degrees of severity.
Frequently Asked Questions
What time does rush hour end in Los Angeles?
There is no single answer. Evening congestion typically begins easing after 7:00 p.m., but on Fridays or following a major incident, significant delays can persist much later.
Is LA traffic getting worse or better?
According to the 2025 INRIX Scorecard, delays in Los Angeles fell 1% compared to 2024, a modest improvement, though congestion levels remain among the highest in the country.
Does working from home reduce LA rush hour traffic?
It has shifted when people travel more than how much. Midday trips have increased significantly since 2019, spreading congestion across a longer window rather than reducing it overall.
Stay Informed About Crashes on LA Freeways: Visit Local Accident Reports
Of course, understanding why LA rush hour lasts as long as it does is useful. But what matters most when you’re on the road is knowing what’s happening right now. Extended congestion increases exposure time on the freeway, and longer exposure means a higher chance of encountering an incident.
Local Accident Reports tracks crash activity across Los Angeles and throughout California in real time. Whether you’re planning your route, checking on a delay, or need information following a collision, visit Local Accident Reports or call (888) 657-1460 for the latest crash alerts and updates.