★★★★★ 5.0
183 Reviews
PPO #120547
Beverly Hills Based
24/7 Available
HomeBlog › North Hollywood Private Security 2026

Complete Guide to
Private Security
in North Hollywood 2026

The North Hollywood Paradox: Crime Is Down, So Why Is Demand for Private Security Up? An in-depth analysis of CompStat trends, enforcement staffing drops, and the strategic solutions protecting NoHo's production lots, Arts District venues, HOAs, and high-value retail.

11%↓
NoHo YTD Part I Crime
1,452↓
LAPD Uniform Officer Deficit
5%↓
Citywide Calls (Underreporting)
PPO
#120547 Licensed
Trusted by leading organizations across Los Angeles
Universal Music Group
Adobe
TIDE
Amoeba Music
UCLA Health
Cedars-Sinai

Here is what the official numbers say about North Hollywood in 2026: Part I crimes — the FBI's category that includes homicide, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, motor vehicle theft, and larceny — are down roughly 11% year-to-date through late April compared to the same window in 2025. Citywide, the trend looks similar. Homicides fell 14% in 2024 from the prior year. Shootings dropped 8% in 2025. By the dashboards, North Hollywood is getting safer.

So why are studio gates getting hardened, residential patrol contracts climbing, NoHo Arts District businesses adding evening guards, and music industry clients calling for executive protection more often than they were two years ago?

Because two other numbers tell the rest of the story. First: LAPD sworn officer staffing has fallen from roughly 10,073 in 2019 to about 8,621 as of April 2026 — a 14% reduction in uniformed officers serving the same city. Second: LAPD's calls for service citywide fell about 5% in 2025, a decline that LA Times reporting and the LAPD's own analysis attribute in meaningful part to immigrant communities reporting crime less often out of fear that information may be shared with ICE. In a city where roughly a third of the population is foreign-born — and in a neighborhood as diverse as North Hollywood — that's not a small effect.

Safety Host Unit security guards standing on patrol duty at a commercial property in North Hollywood

Read those three data points together and the picture inverts. Reported crime is down. Enforcement capacity is down further. Reporting itself is suppressed. The space between what's actually happening and what's being officially counted has widened. And the people who carry the consequences — production companies losing equipment overnight, retail operators on Lankershim watching shrinkage tick up, residents on Magnolia Boulevard waiting forty-five minutes for a non-emergency response, talent and executives in NoHo studios making calculations about access and exposure — are the people now writing private security into their operating budgets.

This guide is for them. It's for production managers running shoots near Universal and the NBC complex. It's for property managers handling apartment buildings in the Tujunga Wash corridor. It's for retailers along Lankershim and Magnolia. It's for music industry professionals working out of NoHo's recording studios and post-production houses. It's for HOA boards in residential streets between Riverside and Burbank Boulevard. And it's for anyone who's noticed that the gap between what the city can provide and what the neighborhood actually needs has gotten harder to ignore.

Safety Host Unit operates under PPO #120547 from Beverly Hills (9171 Wilshire Blvd) and Downtown LA (355 S Grand Ave), with clients including UMG, Adobe, and TIDE. Our North Hollywood deployments span studio protection, NoHo Arts venue security, residential patrol, and high-value retail. We wrote this guide because most published North Hollywood security content is templated, surface-level, and disconnected from the actual operational reality on the ground. Your security decisions deserve better.

The 2026 North Hollywood Security Landscape

What the data says, plainly

LAPD North Hollywood Division Part I crimes are tracked monthly in the LAPD CompStat "North Hollywood Area Profile." Through April 25, 2026, year-to-date totals show roughly 11% fewer reported Part I crimes than the same period in 2025. This mirrors a citywide decrease.

Citywide context — LAPD reported a 14% drop in homicides from 2023 to 2024, an 8% reduction in shooting victims from 2024 to 2025 (981 down to 899), and recovered 8,650 firearms in 2025, more than 1,000 above the prior year. (Crime Statistics & Trends in Los Angeles, 2026)

The enforcement capacity gap — LAPD sworn officer staffing has fallen from 10,073 in 2019 to 8,621 as of April 2026, a reduction of more than 1,400 officers covering the same 503 square miles and roughly four million people. North Hollywood Division shares in that gap. Response times for non-emergency calls have stretched. Proactive patrol — the kind that deters opportunistic property crime — has compressed.

Reporting suppression — LAPD's average monthly citywide calls for service in 2025 fell by about 3,530 calls (~5%) versus the prior year. Public reporting from the Los Angeles Times and LAPD officials has linked part of this decline to immigrant communities choosing not to report crimes for fear that information could reach federal immigration enforcement. North Hollywood, with one of the more diverse demographic profiles in the San Fernando Valley, sits squarely in the zone where this effect operates. (NoHo Neighborhood Council, April 2026 Crime Update)

"Reported crime is down. Enforcement capacity is down further. Reporting itself is suppressed. The gap between official statistics and reality has widened."

The composite picture

If you only look at the reported-crime line, North Hollywood looks like a success story. If you layer in the staffing reduction and the reporting suppression, the picture becomes: fewer documented incidents, less enforcement capacity to address what is documented, and an unknown but non-trivial amount of incident activity that is happening without entering the official record at all.

That is the gap private security is being asked to close. It's why studios are no longer treating a single front-gate guard as sufficient. It's why HOAs in residential pockets are contracting nightly patrol. It's why retailers on Lankershim have moved from camera-only deterrence to camera-plus-physical-presence during evening hours. The decisions aren't being driven by panic. They're being driven by people doing the math.

Safety Host Unit private patrol vehicle operating near a commercial corridor in North Hollywood

The geography of North Hollywood security demand

North Hollywood is not one place. It's at least six places, and each carries a different threat model:

🎭
NoHo Arts District
Bounded roughly by Magnolia, Lankershim, Camarillo, and Vineland. Theaters, galleries, restaurants, bars, live music venues. Foot traffic late, alcohol presence, parking-adjacent vehicle break-ins, evening crowd dynamics.
High Evening Foot Traffic
🎬
Universal City / Studio Adjacency
The southern fringe where Universal Studios, the NBC complex, and CBS Radford operate. Production traffic, talent movement, vendor access, vehicle staging.
High Production Assets
🛍️
NoHo West / Laurel Plaza
Victory Boulevard retail, large-format shopping, mixed-use development. Vehicle break-ins, shoplifting concentrated in chain retail, parking structure incidents.
High Retail Shrinkage
🏢
Magnolia / Riverside / Burbank
Primarily multi-family residential with concentrated apartment density. Mail and package theft, vehicle break-ins, intermittent burglary.
High Residential Burglary
🔩
Lankershim Industrial North
North of Magnolia toward Saticoy. Light industrial, warehouse, auto-related businesses. After-hours intrusion, copper and metal theft, vehicle and equipment loss.
High Commercial Intrusion
⛰️
Tujunga Wash Residential West
West of Coldwater Canyon. Lower-density residential, but the wash corridor historically attracts transient activity and displacement effects.
High Encampment Displacement

A security program designed for one of these subzones is not a security program designed for the others.

Sector-Specific Security in North Hollywood

Film, television, and music production

North Hollywood's production economy is layered. The major lots — Universal, NBC, CBS Radford — operate their own internal security and contract supplementary coverage. The independent production houses, post-production facilities, music studios, and rental stages that fill the neighborhood between Lankershim and Vineland operate with much thinner security and far higher exposure.

The threat model:

  • Equipment theft: Camera packages, lenses, audio gear, lighting kits. Insurance covers replacement but not the schedule impact of a stolen package the morning of a shoot day. Overnight on-set security is the deterrent.
  • Set perimeter and access control: Talent, crew, vendors, and unauthorized fans all flow toward an active set. Wristband or credential systems plus posted security at access points keeps the perimeter clean.
  • Talent privacy and access: Confidential casting, unreleased scripts, prerelease footage. Security here doubles as confidentiality management — non-disclosure-bound officers, controlled visitor logs, paparazzi awareness.
  • Vehicle and base camp security: Trailers, picture cars, and equipment trucks staged on residential streets are high-target. Foot patrol during shoot days and overnight static post when wrapped reduces loss.
  • Music studio sessions: Late-night sessions, valuable talent on premises, and known address visibility create exposure. Discrete security with industry comfort is the differentiator from generic guard services.
Film and television production set security in North Hollywood by Safety Host Unit

NoHo Arts District businesses

The Arts District operates on a different rhythm than the rest of the neighborhood. Evenings and weekends are peak. Alcohol is present. Crowds move between venues. Parking is dispersed.

The threat model:

  • Crowd management: Theaters at intermission, bars at closing, restaurants on busy nights. Trained security presence keeps friction from escalating into incidents.
  • ID verification and venue access: Underage entry attempts, fake credentials, doorman professionalism. Venues that get this right protect their liquor licenses and their reputation simultaneously.
  • After-hours and lockup: Empty venues between 2 a.m. and morning open are vulnerable. Mobile patrol passes with lockup verification close the window.
  • Parking lot and vehicle security: A meaningful portion of Arts District crime is vehicle-adjacent — break-ins, catalytic converter theft, tampering. Visible patrol presence in venue-adjacent parking is among the highest-ROI security spend.
  • Disturbance response: Drunken disputes, ejection support, occasional medical incident. Trained security is faster and safer than waiting on stretched LAPD response.
Premium retail security officer on guard in the NoHo Arts District

Retail and commercial corridors

Lankershim, Magnolia, Victory, and the NoHo West retail center carry distinct exposures.

The threat model:

  • Shoplifting and organized retail crime: Coordinated theft crews work LA retail systematically. Visible guard presence and well-trained loss prevention deters far more than camera-only setups.
  • Smash-and-grab: Less common in NoHo than in some other LA districts, but evening glass-front retail remains at non-zero risk.
  • Employee and customer safety: De-escalation training matters. The presence that prevents incidents is also the presence that prevents lawsuits.
  • Opening and closing security: Cash handling moments are highest risk. Guard presence during open and close, plus armored or escort service for deposits, is appropriate for higher-volume operators.
  • Vehicle break-ins in parking structures: A repeated theme across the neighborhood. Patrol coverage of parking facilities is one of the most visible and effective deterrents.

Residential — apartments, condos, gated communities, HOAs

Multi-family residential is North Hollywood's largest property category by unit count. The threat model:

  • Mail and package theft: Front-door packages, mailroom access. Patrol presence during delivery windows materially reduces loss.
  • Vehicle break-ins in resident parking: Underground garages, surface lots, street-adjacent assigned spaces. All exposed.
  • Trespass and lobby loitering: Tailgating through controlled entries is the most common access breach. Staffed lobby or roving residential patrol is the answer.
  • Domestic disputes and welfare checks: Property management often calls security before calling LAPD for non-emergency situations. Trained de-escalation matters.
  • Encampment management: Adjacent encampments affect property safety, sanitation, and resident concerns. The legal and humane handling of this is genuinely complex and requires trained guards operating under clear post orders.
Residential security patrol officer protecting a gated community or apartment complex in North Hollywood

Executive protection and talent security

North Hollywood houses or hosts a significant population of music, film, and television professionals. The threat model is highly individualized and includes:

  • Residence security — perimeter assessment, access control, household staff vetting coordination.
  • Travel and event protection — accompaniment to studios, public appearances, private events.
  • Stalker and threat case management — coordination with law enforcement, threat assessment, court-coordinated protection.
  • Children and family member protection — school transport, public outings, residence-based coverage.

This category requires officers with specific executive protection training, not general guard credentials. A provider that conflates the two is unprepared for the work.

The 6 Layers of a Real North Hollywood Security Program

A real security program is defined by layered execution. It starts with comprehensive physical assessments and flows through verified supervisor accountability.

1
Risk Assessment
Before a guard is posted, the property gets walked. A real risk assessment includes perimeter inspection, entry-point inventory, lighting evaluation, camera coverage map, neighbor-context review (what's adjacent, what's across the street, what's behind), historical incident review where available, and a documented threat profile specific to the property type and use. Any provider that quotes a price before walking the site is selling a commodity, not a program.
2
Custom Post Orders
Post orders are the written instructions that govern guard behavior at the post. Generic post orders are worthless. Site-specific post orders specify gate procedure, verification protocol for inbound visitors and vendors, patrol routes and timing, response procedures for common scenarios (suspicious person, alarm activation, medical incident, fire, civil dispute), escalation chain by name and phone, and exception handling. A guard with good post orders is more effective than three guards with bad ones.
3
Licensed, Trained Personnel
In California, security guards must hold current BSIS Guard Cards, and employing companies must hold current Private Patrol Operator (PPO) licenses. Verification is public on the BSIS website. Beyond the license, training that matters includes de-escalation, report writing, post-specific orientation, and (for armed posts) firearm certification with appropriate ongoing training. Safety Host Unit operates under PPO #120547.
4
Technology Integration
Cameras, access control, alarm systems, and license plate recognition (LPR) all multiply the effectiveness of human presence. A guard who can pull camera footage in real time, verify visitor identity against an access database, and review LPR alerts on inbound vehicles is operating with information the LAPD officer responding twenty minutes later won't have. Technology doesn't replace personnel — it makes the personnel material more effective.
5
Supervision and Accountability
The single largest difference between security companies is the supervisor layer. A guard alone on shift, unsupervised, unaccountable, is the cheapest security configuration and the most failure-prone. Real programs include named supervisors with defined client communication, regular post audits (announced and unannounced), tour compliance verification, and clear escalation paths.
6
Documentation and Reporting
Daily Activity Reports submitted within 24 hours. Incident reports with photo documentation, named parties, and timeline. Tour compliance reports showing checkpoint coverage. Quarterly program reviews with measurable performance against agreed KPIs. This layer is what insurers care about, what lawyers care about if anything ever ends up in court, and what gives a client the basis to evaluate whether the program is working. A security provider that resists documentation transparency is communicating something important about how they actually operate.

California & Los Angeles Compliance Framework

Private security operates inside a complex legal framework in California. Staying compliant protects your business from civil liability and municipal issues.

BSIS and PPO licensing

The California Bureau of Security and Investigative Services (BSIS) regulates private security. Any company providing security guard services must hold a current PPO license. Individual guards must hold current Guard Cards. Armed guards must additionally hold exposed firearm permits and complete recurring training requirements. Public verification is available on the BSIS website. Safety Host Unit's active registration is PPO #120547.

Workplace violence prevention (SB 553)

California Senate Bill 553, effective July 2024, requires most California employers to maintain a written Workplace Violence Prevention Plan with specific elements including hazard assessment, employee training, and incident logging. Security providers serving North Hollywood businesses should be functionally integrated into this plan, not bolted on after the fact. We assist clients in mapping this compliance via our private security planning services.

Use of force

California law constrains private security use of force tightly. Guards operate under the same standards as private citizens regarding citizen's arrest (Penal Code §837) and use of force. The correct operational posture in nearly all situations is observe, document, report, and coordinate with law enforcement — not intervene physically. Any provider whose marketing or post orders contemplate aggressive engagement is a liability exposure for the client.

City of Los Angeles specifics

The Los Angeles Municipal Code includes provisions on private patrol vehicle markings, alarm permits, and security plans for specific business categories. Live entertainment venues, alcohol-serving establishments, and certain retail categories have additional layered requirements. A provider operating daily in North Hollywood should know these as a matter of routine.

Production-specific considerations

Film and television production involves location permits, FilmLA coordination, and sometimes specific security requirements written into permit conditions. Productions filming on Los Angeles city streets, in residential neighborhoods, or with specific stunt or equipment elements may carry security requirements as part of permit issuance. Providers experienced in production set security work are familiar with this layer.

Get a Free North Hollywood Security Audit

Safety Host Unit provides customized proposals and comprehensive security layout plans within 24 hours. Licensed PPO #120547, fully insured, and available 24/7 across all of North Hollywood.

Office Location
PPO License
Audit Window
Within 48 Hours

How to Choose a Private Security Provider in North Hollywood

The Los Angeles market is highly competitive. Choosing on price alone is the fastest route to an unsupervised post and high guard turnover.

Warehouse & Studio Security Red Flags
  • Generic, templated marketing: If the provider's website reads like every other security company's website, the service will too. Specificity is the signal.
  • Price-only competition: Guard labor has a real cost floor in California. Bids materially below market signal either underpaid guards (turnover, low quality, low engagement) or skipped supervision and documentation layers.
  • No verifiable client references: A legitimate provider can name and connect you to clients with comparable use cases.
  • Vague reporting: "We send reports" is not a reporting standard. Ask to see samples.
  • No supervisor structure: A guard with no supervisor is a guard with no accountability.
  • No site walk before quote: The walk is the assessment. Skipping it means the quote isn't real.
  • License opacity: A provider should volunteer their PPO number. If you have to ask twice, that's information.

The questions to ask

  • What is your PPO license number?
  • How many active guards do you employ, and what is your 12-month turnover rate?
  • What is your supervisor-to-guard ratio?
  • Show me a sample Daily Activity Report (DAR) and a sample Incident Report.
  • Walk me through how your guard would handle [specific scenario relevant to your property].
  • What is your response protocol if a guard fails to check in at a scheduled time?
  • What is your insurance coverage, and can you add my property as additional insured?
  • Who are three current North Hollywood–area clients I can speak with?
  • Are you armed-capable if my risk profile changes? What is your decision framework?
  • What is your minimum engagement term, and what are the cancellation terms?

Armed versus unarmed

For most North Hollywood properties — residential, retail, NoHo Arts venues, standard production sets — well-supervised unarmed guards with strong technology integration and rapid LAPD coordination are sufficient. Armed coverage is appropriate where cash exposure is significant, where a specific threat profile justifies it (cannabis-adjacent, certain executive protection contexts, documented targeting), or where insurance underwriting requires it. The right answer comes from a risk assessment, not a sales pitch.

Local matters

A provider whose supervisors and guards know North Hollywood — who can tell you the difference between the dynamics on Lankershim south of Magnolia versus Lankershim north of Saticoy, who has worked Universal City production traffic, who has handled NoHo Arts venue Friday nights — brings operational texture that national franchises don't have. Local is not a tagline. It's a capability. Safety Host Unit brings this deep local expertise to every North Hollywood deployment.

Cost and ROI Analysis

Private security pricing in the San Fernando Valley generally tracks the broader LA market, with some upward variance for production work and downward variance for routine residential patrol. Indicative 2026 ranges:

Security Tier / Service Category Hourly / Per-Pass Rate Key Elements
Unarmed Guard (Standard) ~$28 – $38 / hr Basic perimeter presence, gate logging
Unarmed Guard (Supervised & Tech-Integrated) ~$32 – $42 / hr NFC patrol loop verification, live DARs with photo attachments
Armed Guard ~$40 – $55 / hr Exposed firearm permit, advanced de-escalation, high-value asset watch
Mobile Patrol Pass ~$25 – $45 / pass Randomized vehicle drop-ins, physical lock checks, night shift
Production Set Security (Overnight Watch) ~$30 – $45 / hr Equipment watch, perimeter control, minimum-hour block contracts
Executive Protection (Single Officer) ~$60 – $125+ / hr Advanced threat assessment, secure transit, low-profile accompaniment
Integrated Residential HOA Program Custom Monthly Combined static gate posts, mobile patrols, and verified alarm response

These are ballpark figures. Real pricing comes from a site assessment.

The ROI math for North Hollywood

The math varies by category, but the structure is consistent:

  • Production set — one stolen camera package can equal a month of overnight security. A wrap-day delay from missing equipment can equal a quarter of overnight coverage.
  • NoHo Arts venue — one significant incident inside a venue (liquor liability, customer injury, ejection escalation) can equal years of professional door security spend.
  • Retail — measurable shrink reduction typically pays for guard presence within months for medium-volume operations.
  • Residential HOA — the value is partly economic (deterrence of property crime, reduction in insurance claims) and partly retention-driven (residents stay longer in buildings where they feel safe).
  • Executive protection — the math here is rarely about routine prevention. It's about the catastrophic event that doesn't happen because the protection was present. That math is asymmetric.

"Security is a risk-transfer instrument that pays for itself in two ways — direct loss prevention and reduction of legal and operational exposure."

The Safety Host Unit Approach

Safety Host Unit operates two LA locations — Beverly Hills (9171 Wilshire Blvd) and Downtown LA (355 S Grand Ave) — under PPO #120547. We service North Hollywood across the property categories above: production, NoHo Arts, retail, residential, and executive protection. Our clients include UMG, Adobe, and TIDE, with standards built around verifiable performance, professional documentation, and supervisor accountability.

For North Hollywood engagements, our model includes:

  • A free site assessment before any quote — we walk the property, identify gaps, and provide a written risk profile.
  • BSIS-licensed officers with site-specific training before they take post.
  • Custom post orders written for your facility and use case.
  • Named supervisor accountability with defined response times.
  • Daily reporting with photo documentation in incident-ready format.
  • Quarterly program reviews with measurable KPIs.
  • Industry-specific officers for production and executive protection contexts.
01
NoHo Presence
Our supervisors understand the operational reality of Lankershim, the Tujunga Wash corridor, and NoHo Arts District. We bring localized capabilities that national franchises lack.
02
BSIS & PPO Compliance
Fully registered under PPO #120547. Strict compliance checks for all guard registrations, background tests, and certificate of insurance endorsements. No liability shortcuts.
03
Real-Time Verification
Our gate and access control protocols explicitly mitigate trespass and equipment loss through real-time credential checks and secure visitor logs.
04
Verifiable Tour Loops
NFC/QR wands at key high-value sectors (production gear storage, residential parking garages, retail bays) to guarantee patrol frequency and complete transparency.

Free site assessment — no obligation. Half a day of walking your property will surface the gaps. You decide what to do about them. Call our Downtown LA office or use the contact form. We respond within the business day.

"A Promise Kept." — Safety Host Unit

Frequently Asked Questions

Is North Hollywood safe in 2026?
By the official numbers, yes — reported Part I crimes through April 2026 are down roughly 11% year-over-year, mirroring a citywide decline. But LAPD sworn staffing has dropped about 14% since 2019, and some portion of the reported-crime decline reflects suppressed reporting rather than reduced incidents. The composite picture: documented crime is improving, enforcement capacity is contracting, and private security is filling more of the gap than it was five years ago.
Why has LAPD's staffing fallen?
A combination of retirements, attrition, hiring constraints, and budget dynamics has reduced LAPD sworn officer count from roughly 10,073 in 2019 to about 8,621 in April 2026. The city serves the same population and footprint with materially fewer officers. Response times have stretched, particularly for non-emergency calls.
Do I need armed or unarmed security?
Most North Hollywood properties — standard residential, retail, NoHo Arts venues, typical production sets — are well-served by supervised unarmed guards with strong technology and law enforcement coordination. Armed coverage is appropriate for elevated risk profiles: significant cash exposure, documented targeting, certain executive protection contexts, or insurance-required configurations. The right answer is a risk assessment, not a default.
What does production set security actually do?
For independent productions: equipment watch overnight, set perimeter and access control during shoot days, base camp and trailer security, talent privacy support, and confidentiality-bound officer behavior. For ongoing studio operations: gate posts, vendor verification, vehicle inspection, and integration with internal security teams where they exist.
Can private security respond faster than LAPD?
For incidents on the property they're already on, yes — by definition. A guard on premises has response time measured in seconds. Stretched LAPD non-emergency response in 2026 averages much longer. For incidents requiring police involvement, private security coordinates with LAPD and provides the documentation, witness statements, and footage that accelerate investigation. The two are complementary, not competitive.
What's the difference between security in North Hollywood and Beverly Hills?
Threat profile and operational rhythm. Beverly Hills security skews heavily toward residential, retail, executive protection, and commercial — with a particular emphasis on discretion and luxury-retail anti-theft sophistication. North Hollywood adds production and music-industry contexts that Beverly Hills sees less of, plus a significant NoHo Arts evening-economy element. The same firm can serve both — Safety Host Unit does — but the post orders and officer briefings differ meaningfully.
How fast can Safety Host Unit deploy in North Hollywood?
For standard unarmed coverage, typically within 7–14 days of contract signature. Emergency coverage is faster. Production set security can often deploy within 48–72 hours for routine shoots. Armed posts and executive protection engagements require longer lead times due to training and post-order development. Initial site assessment can happen within 48 hours of your request.
Do you work with productions filming on city streets?
Yes. Production set security operating on Los Angeles streets coordinates with FilmLA permitting and any specific security conditions written into the permit. We have experience with the permit framework and the operational realities of street-based shoots in North Hollywood and across LA.

Reference Material & Industry Reports