By Los Angeles Times Staff
Updated Nov. 28, 9:27 p.m. Pacific
1,197,801
confirmed cases
+13,239 on Saturday
19,132
deaths
+32 on Saturday
The COVID-19 pandemic has spread rapidly across California. Experts say the true number of people infected is unknown and likely much higher than official tallies.
To better understand the spread of the virus, The Times is conducting an independent, continual survey of dozens of local health agencies across the state.
What we know
The holiday is delaying case counts. With some testing centers and government offices closed for the holiday, officials say to expected lower case counts announced in the days following Thanksgiving.
New cases have been surging. Over the last seven days, the state has averaged 13,271 cases per day, a 71.8% increase from two weeks ago. Roughly 6.2% of tests this past week have come back positive.
Hospitalizations are also increasing. There are now 6,972 patients statewide with a confirmed case, 97% more than two weeks ago.
Higher death tallies are expected. The state has averaged 61.1 daily deaths over the last week. When case counts increase, the death toll typically rises soon after.
Stricter rules are starting to return. The governor now rates 51 counties as too risky to reopen, including Los Angeles County.
Disparities in age and race persist. Roughly 74% of the dead were 65 or older. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 2.9 times more likely than whites to test positive.
California counties +Other trackers +More coverage +
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Maps
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Demographics
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State rankings
The latest totals
Coronavirus can infect people so rapidly that it has continued to spread despite shutdown orders aimed at slowing the growth of new cases and flattening the line below.
The number of cases in California is now on pace to double every 57.9 days, a number used to measure how quickly the virus is spreading.
CasesDeaths
Cumulative cases
Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.0200,000400,000600,000800,0001,000,0001,200,000Stay-at-home orderStay-at-home orderGovernoreases limitsGovernoreases limits1,197,801Nov. 28
Times survey of county and local health departments
Local governments announce new cases and deaths each day, though bottlenecks in bureaucracy can introduce delays. For instance, some agencies do not report new totals on holidays and weekends, leading to lower numbers on those days.
Over the past week, the state has averaged 13,271 new cases and 61.1 new deaths per day.
New cases by day
Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.05,00010,00015,00020,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverageData collectionerrors reportedData collectionerrors reported
Deaths by day
Feb.AprilJuneAug.Oct.0501001502007-dayaverage7-dayaverage
The lines above are seven-day averages. They offer a more stable view of the trend than daily totals. The gray range marks when errors in a state computer system delayed the tabulation of new cases.
Where new cases are concentrated
State officials study the latest data and then rate counties to determine when and how businesses reopen. After adjusting for population, the virus is now categorized as widespread in 51 counties, keeping those areas largely locked down. Together they are home to 98% of California residents.
The government doesn't release enough data to replicate its analysis, but the rate of new cases over the last seven days provides some insight into where the virus is spreading.
Metric
CasesDeaths
Method
Per 100kTotals
Counties ranked by new cases per 100,000 residents
1. Lassen
939.6 cases per 100k in last 7 days939.6 cases per 100k in last 7 days7-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
2. Sutter
723.9723.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
3. Kings
7037037-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
4. Alpine
698.1698.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
5. Imperial
633.7633.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
6. Tuolumne
506.2506.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
7. Shasta
458.4458.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
8. Yuba
402.7402.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
9. Amador
396.5396.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
10. San Bernardino
372.9372.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
11. Trinity
349.9349.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
12. Mono
345.7345.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
13. Kern
341.1341.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
14. Siskiyou
296.3296.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
15. Tehama
291.9291.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
16. Los Angeles
289.2289.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
17. San Diego
281.8281.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
18. Yolo
277.7277.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
19. Stanislaus
267.2267.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
20. San Benito
259.2259.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
21. Colusa
256.2256.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
22. Sacramento
249.3249.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
23. Monterey
245.6245.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
24. Fresno
241.2241.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
25. Orange
240.8240.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
26. Modoc
223.8223.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
27. Santa Cruz
2212217-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
28. Madera
214.8214.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
29. El Dorado
206.3206.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
30. Merced
204.8204.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
31. Plumas
203.2203.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
32. Mendocino
1991997-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
33. Glenn
197.2197.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
34. Tulare
190.5190.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
35. San Luis Obispo
185.5185.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
36. Placer
175.5175.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
37. Santa Clara
172.8172.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
38. Nevada
169.5169.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
39. Napa
167.9167.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
40. Mariposa
165.3165.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
41. Riverside
161.3161.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
42. Solano
156.7156.77-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
43. Del Norte
145.9145.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
44. San Joaquin
140.1140.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
45. Contra Costa
130.9130.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
46. Sonoma
123.9123.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
47. San Mateo
123.4123.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
48. San Francisco
117.1117.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
49. Alameda
102.5102.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
50. Butte
100.8100.87-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
51. Lake
98.298.27-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
52. Ventura
96.696.67-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
53. Marin
91.191.17-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
54. Inyo
88.588.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
55. Humboldt
88.488.47-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
56. Santa Barbara
82.582.57-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
57. Sierra
68.368.37-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
58. Calaveras
61.961.97-day average │7-day average │March 1Nov. 29
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The Times' calculation of per capita rates can vary from what's published elsewhere. To learn more about how and why this count sometimes differs from official figures, consult our FAQ.
What's open where?
See how the governor has rated all 58 counties, and what that means for reopening, in our county reopening tracker.
Mapping the toll
The coronavirus has been found in all 58 counties, from urban Southern California to the state's rural north.
Cumulative totals
Metric
CasesDeaths
Method
Per 100kTotals
Confirmed cases6201.4k2.1k3k3.9k5.7k7.4k
Hover for more information.
Los AngelesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan DiegoSacramentoSacramentoSan FranciscoSan FranciscoReddingReddingFresnoFresno
Cumulative totals
County
Cases
Per 100k
Saturday
Deaths
Per 100k
Saturday
Imperial »
15,862
8,801.7
–
356
197.5
–
Kings »
11,093
7,391.6
+406
87
58
–
Lassen »
1,773
5,685.4
–
3
9.6
–
Kern »
41,328
4,680.1
+696
448
50.7
–
Tulare »
20,550
4,462.8
–
308
66.9
–
Alpine »
50
4,363
–
0
0
–
San Bernardino »
92,164
4,316
+1,942
1,129
52.9
–
Merced »
11,537
4,287.7
–
179
66.5
–
Stanislaus »
21,585
4,002.4
+125
424
78.6
–
Madera »
6,047
3,901
–
85
54.8
–
Fresno »
37,994
3,884.4
+270
481
49.2
–
Los Angeles »
391,225
3,874.3
+3,432
7,623
75.5
+19
Mono »
548
3,866.2
+3
3
21.2
–
San Joaquin »
25,675
3,506.5
–
502
68.6
–
Sutter »
3,332
3,475.5
+188
16
16.7
+1
Riverside »
82,286
3,452.6
–
1,437
60.3
–
Monterey »
14,791
3,414.3
+140
121
27.9
+5
Colusa »
694
3,233.3
–
6
28
–
Glenn »
884
3,168.8
–
8
28.7
–
San Benito »
1,865
3,138.9
+28
16
26.9
–
Marin »
7,755
2,979.3
+51
129
49.6
–
Yuba »
2,036
2,696.9
+55
10
13.2
–
Shasta »
4,718
2,634.5
–
47
26.2
–
Santa Barbara »
11,205
2,525.1
–
135
30.4
–
Tehama »
1,589
2,507.4
–
25
39.4
–
Orange »
76,761
2,425.9
+1,666
1,577
49.8
–
Sacramento »
36,630
2,425.8
–
576
38.1
–
San Diego »
80,018
2,422.7
+1,859
997
30.2
+1
Sonoma »
12,049
2,403.5
–
157
31.3
–
Solano »
10,036
2,288.6
–
81
18.5
–
Yolo »
4,736
2,203
+110
75
34.9
–
San Luis Obispo »
6,129
2,177.6
–
36
12.8
–
Ventura »
18,394
2,168.8
–
175
20.6
–
Contra Costa »
23,895
2,108.5
+324
261
23
–
Napa »
2,931
2,085.7
–
16
11.4
–
San Mateo »
14,148
1,847.2
+441
170
22.2
–
Tuolumne »
981
1,819
–
8
14.8
–
Mendocino »
1,559
1,783.3
–
23
26.3
–
Alameda »
29,116
1,771.4
+259
511
31.1
+6
San Francisco »
15,342
1,763.4
+256
160
18.4
–
Santa Clara »
33,732
1,754.9
+747
476
24.8
–
Butte »
3,853
1,696.8
–
59
26
–
Placer »
6,354
1,671.8
–
68
17.9
–
Santa Cruz »
4,424
1,616
+226
28
10.2
–
Inyo »
290
1,603.5
–
16
88.5
–
Amador »
563
1,488.3
+9
16
42.3
–
Modoc »
131
1,465.7
–
0
0
–
Siskiyou »
624
1,433.2
–
2
4.6
–
Lake »
886
1,381.2
–
19
29.6
–
El Dorado »
2,315
1,240.2
–
4
2.1
–
Trinity »
158
1,228.4
–
0
0
–
Nevada »
1,183
1,193.8
–
9
9.1
–
Plumas »
215
1,149.8
+4
0
0
–
Del Norte »
313
1,141.3
–
1
3.6
–
Calaveras »
450
994.8
–
22
48.6
–
Mariposa »
130
741.2
+2
2
11.4
–
Sierra »
19
648.5
–
0
0
–
Humboldt »
850
626.1
–
9
6.6
–
Show less
Residents of cities, neighborhoods and regions all across the state have contracted the coronavirus. Here are the latest tallies for 1,277 places as released by county health departments.
Confirmed cases
100
1,000
10,000
Counties that do not report cases by locality
© Mapbox © OpenStreetMap Improve this map
The following counties currently do not report cases by locality: Alpine, Colusa, Glenn, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoc, San Benito, Sierra, Tehama and Tuolumne
Filter by countyAlameda
Amador
Butte
Calaveras
Contra Costa
Del Norte
El Dorado
Fresno
Humboldt
Imperial
Inyo
Kern
Kings
Lake
Los Angeles
Madera
Marin
Mendocino
Merced
Mono
Monterey
Napa
Nevada
Orange
Placer
Plumas
Riverside
Sacramento
San Bernardino
San Diego
San Francisco
San Joaquin
San Luis Obispo
San Mateo
Santa Barbara
Santa Clara
Santa Cruz
Shasta
Siskiyou
Solano
Sonoma
Stanislaus
Sutter
Trinity
Tulare
Ventura
Yolo
Yuba
Search by name
Area
Confirmed cases
East Los Angeles
8,690
Pomona
8,302
Palmdale
7,535
North Hollywood
6,280
Lancaster
6,232
El Monte
6,149
South Gate
6,132
Glendale
6,117
Santa Clarita
6,092
Downey
5,991
Boyle Heights
5,885
Compton
5,565
Pacoima
5,555
Sylmar
5,183
Norwalk
4,976
Van Nuys
4,781
Unincorporated - Florence-Firestone
4,683
Lynwood
4,559
Panorama City
4,459
Baldwin Park
4,344
West Covina
4,179
Inglewood
4,047
Huntington Park
3,912
Vernon Central
3,893
90805: Long Beach
3,878
Reseda
3,638
Pasadena
3,635
Pico Rivera
3,586
Whittier
3,564
Montebello
3,349
Bellflower
3,323
Paramount
3,319
West Vernon
3,155
Florence-Firestone
3,122
Westlake
3,039
Wholesale District
2,971
Canoga Park
2,969
North Hills
2,897
Hawthorne
2,844
Central
2,825
Bell Gardens
2,794
Melrose
2,790
South Whittier
2,747
Sun Valley
2,687
Burbank
2,673
Carson
2,661
South Park
2,631
Watts
2,561
90813: Long Beach
2,554
San Pedro
2,502
Vermont Vista
2,498
Wilmington
2,456
Castaic
2,398
Arleta
2,293
Pico-Union
2,291
Northridge
2,257
La Puente
2,193
Bell
2,177
Azusa
2,160
Harvard Park
2,145
Winnetka
2,079
Century Palms/Cove
2,046
Athens-Westmont
2,033
Torrance
2,027
Granada Hills
2,025
Covina
2,013
Willowbrook
1,997
Exposition Park
1,914
Lakewood
1,895
El Sereno
1,889
Maywood
1,858
Hollywood
1,856
Alhambra
1,848
Sherman Oaks
1,788
90806: Long Beach
1,769
Glendora
1,724
Highland Park
1,721
Temple-Beaudry
1,686
Gardena
1,669
Lake Balboa
1,625
Koreatown
1,588
San Fernando
1,580
Hacienda Heights
1,573
Cudahy
1,550
Woodland Hills
1,547
Wilshire Center
1,545
Lincoln Heights
1,536
University Park
1,480
Santa Monica
1,466
West Whittier/Los Nietos
1,456
Harbor Gateway
1,392
90810: Long Beach
1,369
90802: Long Beach
1,346
Mission Hills
1,342
90804: Long Beach
1,340
Rosemead
1,325
Monterey Park
1,324
Downtown
1,273
La Mirada
1,266
Green Meadows
1,249
West Adams
1,229
Valinda
1,196
South El Monte
1,182
San Jose Hills
1,172
Tarzana
1,116
Chatsworth
1,109
Valley Glen
1,107
Monrovia
1,096
Encino
1,083
Hyde Park
1,063
Rowland Heights
1,049
Eagle Rock
1,040
San Gabriel
1,026
Glassell Park
1,017
Altadena
994
Lennox
983
Lawndale
974
Silver Lake
972
Beverly Hills
960
Walnut Park
959
East Hollywood
943
West Hollywood
925
Vermont Knolls
921
Bassett
917
Diamond Bar
913
San Dimas
894
East Rancho Dominguez
892
Redondo Beach
886
West Hills
879
90815: Long Beach
863
Baldwin Hills
852
Commerce
849
Tujunga
849
Cerritos
826
Santa Fe Springs
824
Lakeview Terrace
802
La Verne
800
Mt. Washington
799
90807: Long Beach
795
Duarte
778
Arcadia
773
Palms
771
Westwood
761
Little Bangladesh
751
Unincorporated - Azusa
746
West Los Angeles
743
Harvard Heights
736
Temple City
734
Hawaiian Gardens
722
Valley Village
718
Harbor City
705
Sunland
696
Unincorporated - Covina
690
Claremont
684
Westchester
680
90808: Long Beach
660
Porter Ranch
652
Culver City
619
West Carson
617
Historic Filipinotown
616
90803: Long Beach
608
Del Rey
571
West Puente Valley
564
Hollywood Hills
559
Artesia
557
Mar Vista
533
Northeast San Gabriel
528
Alsace
525
Venice
524
Manhattan Beach
519
Country Club Park
514
Brentwood
498
Walnut
492
Covina (Charter Oak)
477
Little Armenia
472
Leimert Park
466
Vermont Square
455
Lake Los Angeles
453
Crenshaw District
443
Figueroa Park Square
437
Cloverdale/Cochran
433
Rancho Palos Verdes
424
Calabasas
416
Echo Park
413
South Pasadena
399
Atwater Village
398
Studio City
397
Avocado Heights
395
Signal Hill
389
Adams-Normandie
385
Elysian Valley
377
Mid-city
376
Jefferson Park
374
Los Feliz
371
90814: Long Beach
368
Athens Village
352
Gramercy Place
348
Hancock Park
341
Hermosa Beach
341
Carthay
340
North Whittier
333
La Crescenta-Montrose
332
Lomita
326
Quartz Hill
325
Victoria Park
314
Stevenson Ranch
303
Miracle Mile
293
Thai Town
286
Agoura Hills
280
South San Gabriel
276
Crestview
273
Manchester Square
273
Unincorporated - Duarte
271
Sun Village
262
La Canada Flintridge
252
Beverlywood
243
Canyon Country
227
View Park/Windsor Hills
223
Pacific Palisades
221
Chinatown
217
El Camino Village
216
Beverly Crest
203
Reseda Ranch
199
St Elmo Village
199
Century City
197
Cadillac-Corning
195
El Segundo
187
Playa Vista
187
Park La Brea
186
South Carthay
182
Wellington Square
181
Santa Monica Mountains
179
Toluca Lake
170
East La Mirada
168
Wiseburn
168
Longwood
157
Lafayette Square
155
Malibu
154
Rosewood/West Rancho Dominguez
145
Littlerock/Pearblossom
142
Unincorporated - Arcadia
142
Elysian Park
141
Palos Verdes Estates
139
Little Tokyo
138
Cheviot Hills
137
Ladera Heights
137
Littlerock
135
Sierra Madre
131
East Whittier
130
Bel Air
128
Unincorporated - South El Monte
125
Rancho Park
121
San Marino
121
Shadow Hills
121
Val Verde
119
Marina del Rey
118
Acton
113
Rancho Dominguez
112
East Pasadena
110
White Fence Farms
99
Unincorporated - Monrovia
98
Unincorporated - Whittier
97
Irwindale
96
La Rambla
96
Del Aire
95
Desert View Highlands
95
Exposition
95
Angelino Heights
89
Unincorporated - Hawthorne
88
University Hills
82
Sunrise Village
73
View Heights
71
La Habra Heights
69
Rolling Hills Estates
66
Valencia
65
Reynier Village
63
Agua Dulce
60
Marina Peninsula
57
Faircrest Heights
55
Kagel/Lopez Canyons
55
Westlake Village
55
Pellissier Village
52
Industry
50
Saugus
50
Unincorporated - West LA
50
Palisades Highlands
49
Rosewood/East Gardena
49
Unincorporated - La Verne
49
North Lancaster
48
Anaverde
46
Rosewood
46
Playa Del Rey
45
Regent Square
43
Harbor Pines
41
Mandeville Canyon
39
Del Sur
36
Santa Catalina Island
36
Toluca Woods
36
Newhall
35
Toluca Terrace
34
Lake Manor
32
Roosevelt
30
Pearblossom/Llano
29
Unincorporated - Palmdale
29
West Rancho Dominguez
29
Littlerock/Juniper Hills
28
Unincorporated - Claremont
28
Leona Valley
27
Unincorporated - Cerritos
27
Hidden Hills
24
Bradbury
23
Southeast Antelope Valley
22
Unincorporated - Pomona
22
Westhills
22
Vernon
21
Twin Lakes/Oat Mountain
20
Unincorporated - Glendora
19
Bouquet Canyon
16
Elizabeth Lake
15
Rolling Hills
14
Saugus/Canyon Country
14
San Pasqual
13
Westfield/Academy Hills
13
Hi Vista
12
90822: Long Beach
11
Lake Hughes
10
Unincorporated - La Habra Heights
10
Unincorporated - Del Rey
9
East Covina
8
South Antelope Valley
8
Sycamore Square
8
Unincorporated - Bradbury
8
Palos Verdes Peninsula
7
Sand Canyon
7
Unincorporated - El Monte
7
West Antelope Valley
7
Brookside
6
Llano
6
Unincorporated - Angeles National Forest
6
Avalon
5
Whittier Narrows
5
Padua Hills
3
San Francisquito Canyon/Bouquet Canyon
3
Angeles National Forest
2
East Lancaster
2
West Chatsworth
1
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Hospitals and patients
Lockdown measures aim to slow the virus in hope of preventing hospitals from being overrun. To keep tabs on capacity, officials watch out for rapid increases in the number of patients.
There are now 6,972 hospital patients statewide with a confirmed case, a change of 97% from two weeks ago.
ConfirmedSuspectedBoth
Intensive care and other hospitalized patients
AprilJuneAug.Oct.02,0004,0006,0008,000
California Department of Public Health
Confirmed patients
County
ICU
Other
Total
Los Angeles »
501
1,548
2,049
San Bernardino »
162
499
661
San Diego »
167
432
599
Orange »
138
396
534
Riverside »
112
421
533
Sacramento »
53
231
284
Fresno »
50
224
274
Santa Clara »
72
174
246
Stanislaus »
34
147
181
Kern »
33
132
165
Alameda »
42
121
163
Placer »
12
116
128
San Joaquin »
27
85
112
Contra Costa »
19
67
86
Ventura »
29
55
84
Tulare »
9
72
81
Monterey »
13
63
76
San Francisco »
25
47
72
Imperial »
14
56
70
Solano »
18
44
62
Shasta »
10
47
57
Kings »
7
45
52
San Mateo »
9
37
46
Butte »
5
32
37
Santa Cruz »
6
29
35
Santa Barbara »
7
26
33
Sonoma »
4
27
31
Yuba »
8
20
28
Madera »
7
18
25
Merced »
8
14
22
Yolo »
5
13
18
Mendocino »
5
9
14
Siskiyou »
2
11
13
Tehama »
4
8
12
Tuolumne »
3
9
12
Nevada »
3
9
12
Napa »
4
7
11
El Dorado »
4
7
11
San Luis Obispo »
1
9
10
Colusa »
0
8
8
Marin »
3
4
7
San Benito »
2
2
4
Lassen »
0
3
3
Amador »
0
3
3
Humboldt »
0
3
3
Lake »
0
2
2
Mono »
0
1
1
Inyo »
0
1
1
Calaveras »
1
0
1
Sutter »
0
0
0
Glenn »
0
0
0
Modoc »
0
0
0
Trinity »
0
0
0
Plumas »
0
0
0
Del Norte »
0
0
0
Mariposa »
0
0
0
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Officials also closely monitor the number of beds open in intensive-care units. In late July, the state changed its tracking method to exclude beds that are only for infants from the count.
Available ICU beds
AprilJuneAug.Oct.01,0002,0003,0004,0005,000State changestracking methodState changestracking method2,019Nov. 27
California Department of Public Health
Testing
After a fitful start, California has increased coronavirus testing in the state. Over the last week, an average of 226,481 tests have been conducted each day.
New tests by day
MayJulySept.Nov.0100,000200,000300,0007-dayaverage7-dayaverage
California Department of Public Health
In the last seven days, about 6.2% of the 1,585,367 tests conducted have returned a positive result.
Positive test rate, seven-day average
MayJulySept.Nov.0%2%4%6%8%10%6.2%Nov. 27
California Department of Public Health
Wide disparities in age and race
While younger adults make up the majority of positive tests, deaths due to the virus have skewed heavily toward the elderly.
Percentage of cases vs. population
0%10%20%30%40%50%80+75-7970-7465-6960-6450-5935-4918-345-170-4
Percentage of deaths vs. population
0%10%20%30%40%50%80+75-7970-7465-6960-6450-5935-4918-345-170-4
There are 1009 cases with an unreported age.
California Department of Public Health
The state has logged the race of the patient in nearly two-thirds of cases.
Latinos and Black people have contracted the virus at a higher rate than white and Asian people. After adjusting for population, Latinos are now 2.9 times more likely to test positive than white people.
Cumulative cases by race per 100,000 people
JuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.Nov.01,0002,0003,000AsianAsianBlackBlackLatino3,264 casesper 100,000Latino3,264 casesper 100,000OtherOtherWhiteWhite
The other category includes Native Americans and people of two or more races. California Department of Public Health
One outcome is that among most age groups, and especially younger people, Black people and Latinos are dying more often than other races relative to their share of the population.
Percentage of deaths vs. population
Age: All
18+
0-17
18-34
35-49
50-64
65-79
80+
CasesDeaths
0%20%40%60%80%BlackAsianWhiteLatino
Race
Deaths
Deaths Pct.
Population Pct.
Latino
9,213
48.5%
36.3%
White
5,757
30.3%
38.8%
Asian
2,309
12.2%
16.5%
Black
1,385
7.3%
6.1%
Note: There are 167 deaths with an unknown race in this age bracket, 1% of the total.
Lives lost to COVID-19
Learn more about those we've lost by reading Times obituaries of Californians who have died from coronavirus.
Nursing homes
Nursing homes are a tragic focal point of the outbreak. Residents and staff have accounted for 6% the state's coronavirus cases, but 34% of its deaths.
CasesDeaths
Deaths at nursing homes vs. elsewhere
JuneJulyAug.Sept.Oct.Nov.05,00010,00015,00020,000
California Department of Public Health
Track outbreaks in California nursing homes
Follow the data and look up the latest tallies at the hundreds of skilled-nursing and assisted-living facilities across the state.
California in context
To date, the United States has recorded 13,079,262 coronavirus cases and 264,729 deaths. In the last week, the country has averaged 165,503 new cases and 1,477 deaths per day.
While California — America’s most populous state — has one the nation’s top case counts, it ranks much lower after adjusting for population. Home to 12% of the country's population, thus far it has accounted for roughly 9% of cases.
New cases in California vs. the rest of the country
MarchMayJulySept.Nov.050,000100,000150,000200,000
Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey
State
Cases
Per 100k
New cases
FewerMore
Texas
1,207,243
4,329.3
Mar 1Nov 27
California
1,184,562
3,025.8
Florida
979,020
4,753
Illinois
705,063
5,499.1
New York
628,375
3,203
Georgia
464,526
4,511.1
Ohio
399,808
3,434.2
Wisconsin
399,526
6,914.1
Michigan
369,801
3,713.8
Tennessee
356,716
5,363.3
North Carolina
354,514
3,490.8
Pennsylvania
349,238
2,730.3
New Jersey
326,473
3,675.7
Indiana
324,537
4,889.5
Arizona
318,638
4,586.9
Missouri
296,665
4,871.3
Minnesota
295,001
5,337.1
Alabama
242,874
4,992.6
Louisiana
230,602
4,944.7
Virginia
230,444
2,738.9
Iowa
225,056
7,184.6
Colorado
220,953
3,994.7
Massachusetts
219,252
3,210
South Carolina
213,120
4,300.3
Maryland
192,858
3,212.5
Utah
190,044
6,240.5
Oklahoma
187,567
4,787.1
Kentucky
171,755
3,868.2
Washington
158,167
2,168.4
Kansas
155,411
5,342.8
Arkansas
153,677
5,138.5
Mississippi
148,387
4,964.8
Nevada
146,317
5,006
Nebraska
124,066
6,513.5
Connecticut
112,581
3,143.4
Idaho
98,500
5,836
New Mexico
91,852
4,389.7
South Dakota
78,280
9,057.2
North Dakota
77,232
10,267.5
Oregon
70,832
1,735.3
Montana
59,796
5,740.1
Rhode Island
53,954
5,106.3
Puerto Rico
50,678
1,496.3
West Virginia
45,046
2,462.8
Delaware
34,170
3,598.8
Wyoming
31,773
5,460.8
Alaska
30,776
4,167.3
District of Columbia
20,937
3,058.7
New Hampshire
19,323
1,438.1
Hawaii
18,006
1,266.2
Maine
11,265
845.2
Vermont
4,005
640.8
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The same is true for deaths. So far, California has accounted for 7% of deaths nationwide. It still trails far behind New York, where deaths surged in the early days of the pandemic.
New deaths in California vs. the rest of the country
MarchMayJulySept.Nov.05001,0001,5002,0002,500
Johns Hopkins University CSSE, Times survey
State
Deaths
Per 100k
New deaths
FewerMore
New York
34,477
175.7
Mar 1Nov 27
Texas
21,693
77.8
California
19,100
48.8
Florida
18,363
89.1
New Jersey
16,942
190.7
Illinois
12,685
98.9
Massachusetts
10,635
155.7
Pennsylvania
10,195
79.7
Georgia
9,380
91.1
Michigan
9,357
94
Arizona
6,588
94.8
Louisiana
6,391
137
Ohio
6,346
54.5
Indiana
5,594
84.3
North Carolina
5,210
51.3
Connecticut
4,961
138.5
Maryland
4,569
76.1
Tennessee
4,526
68
South Carolina
4,346
87.7
Virginia
4,044
48.1
Missouri
3,836
63
Mississippi
3,769
126.1
Alabama
3,572
73.4
Minnesota
3,535
64
Wisconsin
3,434
59.4
Colorado
2,977
53.8
Washington
2,703
37.1
Arkansas
2,436
81.5
Iowa
2,360
75.3
Nevada
2,095
71.7
Kentucky
1,871
42.1
Oklahoma
1,704
43.5
Kansas
1,529
52.6
New Mexico
1,504
71.9
Rhode Island
1,346
127.4
Puerto Rico
1,076
31.8
Nebraska
984
51.7
Idaho
909
53.9
North Dakota
908
120.7
South Dakota
888
102.7
Oregon
885
21.7
Utah
849
27.9
Delaware
763
80.4
West Virginia
712
38.9
District of Columbia
677
98.9
Montana
657
63.1
New Hampshire
517
38.5
Hawaii
240
16.9
Wyoming
215
37
Maine
190
14.3
Alaska
119
16.1
Vermont
67
10.7
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Tracking the coronavirus
California counties
Alameda
Alpine
Amador
Butte
Calaveras
Colusa
Contra Costa
Del Norte
El Dorado
Fresno
Glenn
Humboldt
Imperial
Inyo
Kern
Kings
Lake
Lassen
Los Angeles
Madera
Marin
Mariposa
Mendocino
Merced
Modoc
Mono
Monterey
Napa
Nevada
Orange
Placer
Plumas
Riverside
Sacramento
San Benito
San Bernardino
San Diego
San Francisco
San Joaquin
San Luis Obispo
San Mateo
Santa Barbara
Santa Clara
Santa Cruz
Shasta
Sierra
Siskiyou
Solano
Sonoma
Stanislaus
Sutter
Tehama
Trinity
Tulare
Tuolumne
Ventura
Yolo
Yuba
Other trackers
Housing homeless people
Nursing homes
State prisons
Following the curve
Unemployment and economic fallout
Which counties are open
Which beaches are closed
Lives lost
Frequently asked questions
More coverage
Coronavirus symptoms
How coronavirus spreads
Get our newsletter
About the numbers
This page was created by Swetha Kannan, Casey Miller, Sean Greene, Lorena Iñiguez Elebee, Rong-Gong Lin II, Ryan Murphy, Melody Gutierrez, Priya Krishnakumar, Sandhya Kambhampati, Maloy Moore, Jennifer Lu, Aida Ylanan, Vanessa Martínez, Ryan Menezes, Thomas Suh Lauder, Andrea Roberson, Ben Poston, Nicole Santa Cruz, Iris Lee, Rahul Mukherjee, Jaclyn Cosgrove, Anthony Pesce, Paul Duginski and Phi Do.
State and county totals come from an ongoing Times survey of California's 58 county health agencies as well as the three run by cities. Those figures are ahead of the totals periodically released by the state's Department of Public Health. State officials acknowledge that their tallies lag behind the updates posted by local agencies throughout the day and do not dispute The Times' method.
Data on hospitalizations, tests, demographics and reopening plans come from California's Department of Public Health.
Nursing home totals include skilled-nursing facilities tracked by the state public health department, as well as assisted-living facilities monitored by the California Department of Social Services.
Data from other states, Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico are collected by researchers at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering.
The Times database is available to the public on Github, a popular website for hosting data and computer code. The files will be updated daily at github.com/datadesk/california-coronavirus-data.
The data collection effort is done in partnership with journalists at the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Diego Union-Tribune, KQED, KPCC, CapRadio, Calmatters and Stanford's Big Local News.
Learn more about The Times count by reading this list of frequently asked questions or by reading this interview with members of our team.
If you see information here that you believe is incorrect or out of date, please contact Data and Graphics Editor Ben Welsh at
[email protected].
Change log
Nov. 13 A chart tracking changes in tier assignments was added to the reopenings tracker.
Nov. 9 Per-capita totals for city-level data added to some county pages.
Oct. 19 Maps were added for case counts in Del Norte, Lake, Siskiyou, Trinity counties.
Oct. 17 The hotspots section now offers a ranking of counties by the total number of cases and deaths in the past week.
Oct. 9 Charts plotting the daily trend in cities and regions added to most county pages.
Oct. 4 Charts plotting how each area stacks up against the state’s reopening benchmarks added to county pages.
Oct. 1 City-level totals added for Shasta County.
Sept. 27 Totals for skilled-nursing facilities are now drawn from the state's open data portal, which is promoted as the most comprehensive and up-to-date source.
Sept. 26 The hotspots section now offers a ranking of counties by deaths per 100,000 residents over the last seven days.
Sept. 22 Nursing home lists moved to a new page focused on skilled-nursing and assisted-living facilities.
Sept. 13 The logarithmic curves plotting the rate of growth in each state were replaced. Instead, stacked-bar charts compare California's case and death counts against the rest of the nation.
Sept. 12 The county map is now exclusively focused on cumulative totals and starts off by displaying grand totals per 100,000 residents.
Sept. 11 The logarithmic curves plotting the rate of growth in each county were replaced. Instead, after adjusting for population, counties are now ranked by the number new cases announced in the past week. The reopening map has been removed and can be found by visiting our more complete county reopening tracker.
https://www.latimes.com/projects/california-coronavirus-cases-tracking-outbreak/