
According to the most recent Orange County Point-in-Time (PIT) Count data, the number of people experiencing homelessness in Santa Ana rose from 1,298 in 2023 to 1,520 in 2024—an increase of approximately 17% in just one year. Countywide, the numbers tell a similarly troubling story: homelessness grew from 7,392 to 8,299 individuals over the same period.
These figures are more than statistics—they represent human beings living without the basic dignity of safe, stable shelter. The PIT Count, conducted each January by the Orange County Continuum of Care in accordance with U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) guidelines, offers only a snapshot of a complex and evolving crisis. Yet even this conservative estimate underscores a clear and worsening trend.

Santa Ana, as Orange County’s second-largest city and a historic hub of community and culture, faces mounting pressure to respond with both urgency and empathy. While local officials have taken steps—such as expanding shelter capacity, launching outreach teams, and investing in affordable housing—the scale of need continues to outpace available resources.
The root causes of homelessness are multifaceted: soaring housing costs, stagnant wages, mental health challenges, and systemic inequities. No single policy or program can solve them alone. What’s needed is a coordinated, sustained effort that combines immediate humanitarian support with long-term structural solutions—rental assistance, supportive housing, behavioral health services, and prevention strategies that keep people from falling into homelessness in the first place.
As the 2025 PIT Count approaches, the community must ask: Will we accept a future where more of our neighbors sleep on sidewalks and in parks? Or will we choose bold, compassionate action that affirms the value of every resident?
The data is clear. The time to act is now.
