
MyLA 3-1-1 4+
City of Los Angeles
Designed for iPad
-
- Free
Screenshots
Description
The power of an open, more accessible City Hall in the palm of your hand.
The power of an open, more accessible City Hall in the palm of your hand.
With MyLA311, City of Los Angeles information and services are just a few taps away.
• The 'Create New Service Request’ feature allows you to quickly and easily request the City’s most popular services, including graffiti removal, pothole repair, and bulky-item pickup.
• Search the City Services Directory - a knolwedge base of City services, programs, and general information.
We have recently added user registration.
• Registered accounts can now login and view all their service requests and the current status. This is completely optional. You can still submit service requests and use the app without registering.
• More service request options.
You can also submit requests using our website: https://MyLA311.lacity.gov
Send feedback to 311@lacity.org
MyLA311 links Angelenos with the services and information they need to enjoy their city, beautify their community and stay connected with their local government.
What’s New
Version 13.010.1
We updated the app with the latest features, bug fixes, and performance improvements.
Ratings and Reviews
In development
Why would LA city launch an app that is inferior to the one that was previously in use? Definitely, this is still in development and forces the user to enter their personal data each time and doesn’t allow the user to view open tickets. I believe they are going to a single user login for all city services, but this app actually takes you to a page to create an account, which takes you in a death spiral to nowhere. And you can’t get back (intuitively at least) without closing the app and starting over. One other thing that is not intuitive is that you tap text for your category— doesn’t appear to be a link, or provide a button look. This isn’t a “modern look”- it is just confusing. The only thing that is an improvement is that if you have geolocation on your photo, it seems to be able to suggest a location. The old app was more challenging, especially with issues in departments like Parks and Rec where it required an address, but there really isn’t a street address available. All in all, not ready for prime time!
Bad but not that bad
This UI definitely has a learning curve. You can report anonymously without putting your info and you can sign in but it is not obvious. Once you select yes, on the report anonymously toggle, you can click continue without filling out your information. But there is no sign to indicate that that’s the case. The landing pledge clearly looks like a website, and there are no buttons to toggle between a login page and services. The buttons at the top of the screen do not work. But you can login if you tap the menu three lines in the top left-hand corner of the screen and stay logged in. But again this is not obvious! Also, when you click upload it does give you the option to take a photo in app. So all the features have been preserved, but they are labeled in a misleading way that might lead us to believe that we have to do more work than we did previously. You can zoom in on the map, but that might also zoom in the page and leave you completely zoomed in altogether, which is frustrating. I can see that they’ve added a few extra questions that might be helpful to some people, but in general, this feels like a lateral move from one somewhat clunky app to a new somewhat clunky app. But I did want to set the record straight that the features that have been complained about in other reviews as being missing are in fact still there they’re just harder to find.
Not as good as the original app. Not intuitive at all.
The app is sluggish and runs links a web page inside of an app box. It’s incredible to witness how they can make an app that wasn’t intuitive even worse. There is seemingly no reason to switch the previous app.
I like how popular services are listed at forefront, but submitting the requests takes so much longer. It’s also impossible to keep up with service requests made after they’ve been requested (or to see if there have been duplicate requests.
The app feel incomplete, a beta version, and is something I would expect of a city 10x smaller than Los Angeles. The city is in a budget deficit, but I can only hope this application was created for free by high school students. Any funding used to replace the functional app is just negligent waste.
App Privacy
The developer, City of Los Angeles, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.
Data Not Linked to You
The following data may be collected but it is not linked to your identity:
- Location
- Contact Info
- User Content
- Identifiers
- Usage Data
- Diagnostics
Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More
Information
- Seller
- City of Los Angeles
- Size
- 41.3 MB
- Category
- Utilities
- Compatibility
-
- iPhone
- Requires iOS 16.0 or later.
- iPad
- Requires iPadOS 16.0 or later.
- Mac
- Requires macOS 13.0 or later and a Mac with Apple M1 chip or later.
- Apple Vision
- Requires visionOS 1.0 or later.
- Languages
-
English, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian Bokmål, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Simplified Chinese, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Traditional Chinese, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese
- Age Rating
- 4+
- Copyright
- © 2025 Salesforce.com, inc. All rights reserved.
- Price
- Free