Yes, it's largely true—the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) is currently operating at or near its lowest sworn staffing levels in roughly 30 years (since around the mid-1990s), based on recent reports and projections.
police1.com
Current Staffing LevelsAs of early-to-mid 2026:
- Recent figures show around 8,677 sworn officers (as of about a week before mid-April 2026 reports), described as the lowest in nearly 25 years.
police1.com
- Earlier 2025–early 2026 numbers hovered in the 8,700–8,738 range, with some reports citing ~8,711 in January 2026.
foxla.com
- Projections from the FY 2026 budget (released in early 2025) warned that attrition and recruiting shortfalls could drop the force to about 8,620 officers by June 30, 2026—the lowest since ~1995.
latimes.com
This continues a steady decline since a peak of over 10,000 officers around 2009–2019. The department has lost hundreds (over 1,300–1,500 since 2019 in some estimates) due to higher attrition, retirements, and recruiting challenges that haven't kept pace.Historical Context
- In the mid-1990s (e.g., during the Richard Riordan era), staffing was in a similar range before a major buildup.
- It rose significantly afterward, hitting highs near or above 10,000.
- By 2023, it had already fallen below 9,000 for the first time in decades.
nbclosangeles.com
- Multiple sources (LA Times, Police1, RAND assessments) explicitly describe the projected or current lows as the lowest in ~30 years or since 1995.
latimes.com
Important Caveats
- "Currently" depends on exact timing and metrics: Actual numbers fluctuate with academy graduations, retirements, and hires. Hiring efforts continue (e.g., City Council approvals for additional recruits in 2025–2026), and some reports note modest stabilization or slight gains in 2025 before further projected drops. The department has authorized strength around 8,700–9,000 but often falls short of deployable patrol goals due to absences, restrictions, and non-field assignments.
- Sworn officers vs. deployable staff: Total sworn headcount includes those in admin, training, or on leave—not all are on the streets. Some critiques note that effective patrol staffing feels even thinner.
- Broader trends: This aligns with national law enforcement staffing challenges post-2020, though LAPD's issues have been acute amid budget pressures, recruitment hurdles, and city politics.
In short, the claim holds up based on official projections, budget documents, and news coverage from outlets like the LA Times and Police1. The department and Mayor Karen Bass have highlighted the need for more officers (e.g., for the 2028 Olympics), but recruiting has struggled despite efforts to speed up hiring. If you're looking for the absolute latest official figure, checking LAPD's Police Commission reports or the city's budget updates would give the most current snapshot.