West Hollywood Apartments with a Pool
Pool-equipped rentals in WeHo, where 280+ sunny days make the water worth it.
Where do you actually find a pool in West Hollywood?
Updated June 2026
Quick Answer
A pool usually adds about $100 to $300 a month over a comparable poolless building in West Hollywood. Pools cluster in larger mid-rise buildings and some 1960s courtyard or dingbat buildings built around a central pool. The small vintage walk-ups that fill much of WeHo rarely have one, so the pool itself narrows your options.
West Hollywood is its own 1.9-square-mile city wedged between Beverly Hills and Hollywood, and it is dense and walkable, with a Walk Score of 89. That density shapes where pools turn up. The older walk-ups along the residential side streets were built lot-line to lot-line with no room for one. The pools live in the larger mid-rise buildings and in the 1960s courtyard and dingbat buildings designed around a central pool deck. If a pool is non-negotiable, you are really shopping that subset of WeHo's stock.
Los Angeles gets more than 280 sunny days a year, so a building pool here is something you can use most of the calendar, not a summer-only amenity. That usability is why the premium holds. Expect a pool to run roughly $100 to $300 more per month than a comparable building without one. Whether that is worth it depends on the pool: a small courtyard pool shared by 40 units is a different deal than a rooftop pool serving a dozen.
On rent overall, 2026 West Hollywood ranges run about $2,100 to $2,700 for a studio, $2,600 to $3,600 for a one-bedroom, and $3,600 to $5,500 for a two-bedroom. Pool buildings tend to sit toward the upper half of those bands. Note too that WeHo runs its own rent stabilization: units with a certificate of occupancy before July 1, 1979 fall under the city's RSO, which caps annual increases at 2.25 percent.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much more do apartments with a pool cost in West Hollywood?
Plan on roughly $100 to $300 more per month than a comparable building without a pool. Against 2026 WeHo ranges, that lands most pool one-bedrooms in the $2,700 to $3,600 zone and two-bedrooms toward the $4,000-plus end. Rooftop pools and newer buildings push the premium higher than a shared courtyard pool does.
Are the pools heated and open year-round?
Not always, so ask before you sign. With 280-plus sunny days a year an unheated pool is usable much of the time, but a heated pool is what makes winter swims realistic. West Hollywood code commonly requires pools to close by 10pm, so confirm the building's posted hours if evening use matters to you.
What should I ask about a building pool before renting?
Four things: rooftop or courtyard, the posted hours (city code often closes pools by 10pm), whether it is heated for year-round use, and how many units share it. A pool serving a dozen units feels private; one serving 60 can be crowded on a hot weekend. Also ask who handles maintenance and whether it ever closes for repairs.
Apartments with a Pool in West Hollywood
2 West Hollywood rentals with a pool available now

