A six-figure salary used to be a sign that you’d made it.

But anymore in Orange County, California.

A single person living in Orange County earning $104,200 a year is now classified as “low income,” according to official state documents released by California’s Department of Housing and Community Development.

The staggering new poverty line is codified in the state’s newly released 2026 income limits, which dictates applicant eligibility for income-restricted apartments, rent caps, and taxpayer-funded housing assistance.

Just last year, the low-income cutoff for a single person in the wealthy Southern California enclave was $94,750.

The economic insanity isn’t just limited to single professionals.

For a family of four in OC, the low-income threshold has ballooned to a whopping $148,850. The designation doesn’t necessarily mean that someone making below that is living in poverty, but the shocking figures underscore just how expensive life and housing has become in the SoCal county.

Orange County’s figures now dwarf neighboring Los Angeles County, where an individual is defined as low-income if they make $93,300, and $133,250 for a family of four.

The report updates limits for all 58 counties in the Golden State — and Orange County isn’t alone.

Several Bay Area counties, including Marin County, San Mateo County, Santa Clara County, Santa Cruz County and San Francisco County, also have six-figure low-income thresholds due to soaring housing costs.

But the new Orange County figures are another stark reminder of California’s affordability crisis, where earning more than $100,000 a year can still qualify you for housing reserved for low-income residents.

Even then, actually getting a taxpayer subsidized apartment is difficult, with the OC California Housing Partnership reporting that 119,785 low-income renter households there do not have access to an
affordable home.

To highlight the enormous disconnect between wages, a full-time worker earning minimum wage would make just around $35,000 a year, less than one-third of the income now considered low income for a single person in Orange County.


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