Retailers across the state were allowed to reopen in recent weeks and the easing will align the city with those guidelines.
Houses of worship can also reopen with capacity limits of 25 percent occupancy or no more than 100 people, whichever is less.
Garcetti in a press conference Tuesday cited Democrat Gov. Gavin Newsom’s new guidelines for in-person shopping and religious services, issued after warnings from the Department of Justice to state and city officials.
The new move will “protect lives and safeguard livelihoods,” Garcetti said.
“The sooner that stores can safely welcome customers inside to shop, the more we'll see our stratospheric unemployment—that some estimate is higher than during the Great Depression here in Los Angeles—that we can finally see that begin to come down.”
Retailers had only been open for curbside and pickup.
Los Angeles, the second-largest city in the United States with some 4 million residents, is part of a county that’s seen over 47,000 CCP virus cases and nearly 2,000 deaths linked to COVID-19, the disease the virus causes. The city has recorded 22,567 cases and 1,051 deaths.
COVID-19 primarily causes severe illness in the elderly and otherwise infirm and kills a small percentage of patients.
If reopening isn’t done correctly, retailers will be shut down again, Garcetti warned.
Restaurants are also not expanding to dine-in service.
Gatherings of any size that include people from different households are still forbidden, with limited exceptions.
The L.A. County Board of Supervisors approved the reopening of in-person shopping at retailers.
Kathleen Teague, owner of Maison on Main Boutique in Newhall, told the broadcaster: “We’re ready to open our doors, we’re ready to have everybody just come in and get Main Street alive and rocking again.”